Off-topic, but I cannot resist sharing Peterson's story of how he became interested in decision theory:
A while back a beautiful woman, whom I quite liked, asked me to marry her. I was stunned. Marriage? Now? It is too early! I have not even turned forty! However, for one reason or another I decided not to share my spontaneous reaction with her. I said I felt overwhelmed by this… unexpected proposal, and that I need some time ot think it over. At dawn the following day I… raced to the university library. I borrowed all the books I could find on decision theory. Later the same afternoon, after having learned what modern decision theory is all about, I still had no clue how to answer the lady.
In the standard approach to axiomatic Bayesian decision theory, an agent (a decision maker) doesn't prefer Act #1 to Act #2 because the expected utility of Act #1 exceeds that of Act #2. Instead, the agent states its preferences over a set of risky acts, and if these stated preferences are consistent with a certain set of axioms (e.g. the VNM axioms, or the Savage axioms), it can be proven that the agent's decisions can be described as if the agent were assigning probabilities and utilities to outcomes and then maximizing expected utility. (Let's call this the ex post approach.)
Peterson (2004) introduces a different approach, which he calls the ex ante approach. In many ways, this approach is more intuitive. The agent assigns probabilities and utilities directly to outcomes (not acts), and these assignments are used to generate preferences over acts. Using this approach, Peterson claims to have shown that the principle of expected utility maximization can be derived from just four axioms.
As Peterson (2009:75,77) explains:
Jensen (2012:428) calls the ex ante approach "controversial," but I can't find any actual published rebuttals to Peterson (2004), so maybe Jensen just means that Peterson's result is "new and not yet percolated to the broad community."
Peterson (2008) explores the ex ante approach in more detail, under the unfortunate title of "non-Bayesian decision theory." (No, Peterson doesn't reject Bayesianism.) Cozic (2011) is a review of Peterson (2008) that may offer the quickest entry point into the subject of ex ante axiomatic decision theory.
Peterson (2009:210) illustrates the controversy nicely:
I'm not a decision theory expert, so I'd be very curious to hear what LW's decision theorists think of the axiomatization in Peterson (2004) — whether it works, and how significant it is.