TimFreeman comments on A summary of Savage's foundations for probability and utility. - Less Wrong
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Excellent summary. Savage's founding of statistics is nice because it only assumes that agents have to make choices between actions, making no assumptions about whether they have to have beliefs or goals. This is important because agents in general don't have to use beliefs or goals, but they do all have to chose actions.
Thanks for the info about boundedness, I didn't notice that on my quick skim through the book.
I think you mean that agents don't have to use beliefs or goals, but they do all have to choose between actions.
If you really meant what you said, then you drew some deep bizarre counterintuitive conclusion there that I can't understand, and I'd really like to see an argument for it.
Yep, my mistake. Fixed.