First, as I mentioned before, I am not sure how to combine epistemic and instrumental rationality together into one useful concept. I am not saying it's impossible, just that nothing comes to my mind. One issue, for example, is that they belong to different categories: one is about knowing and the other is about doing.
If we forget about epistemic and instrumental rationality for a moment and think about what reasoning is aimed at achieving. That is, why we care about it. Then, I think we can get closer to understanding how epistemic and instrumental rationality might work together to become part of something larger. They are ,of course, still different techniques.
Do you think that the below areas describe what it means to reason well?
Epistemic/Instrumental rationality is really about certain types of skills that allow us to do well in the above areas (I think I covered all of them). I think that there might also be more types of skills. I have a general idea about what another one might be, I am not sure how many others there might be. Although, I want the compendium to cover existing and established ideas only. That is why I am referring to epistemic and instrumental rationality and not anything else.
All in all, I am not satisfied by the "perfect agent" or "optimize utility" definitions of rationality. The perfect agent approach is essentially WWJD -- What Would Jesus Do -- only without the religious baggage, and optimizing utility doesn't tell me how to actually, in practice do that.
What do you think about defining rationality as a property that is attributed by agents to certain thoughts and behaviours? This would mean that it is not only bounded by the agent’s abilities and the information it has, but also by its understanding of what it means to be rational. Essentially, it would mean that ‘rationality’ is subjective. To avoid the fallacy of the grey there needs to be some objective way to judge different agents understanding of what it means to be rational. This objective way is basically our best overall guess at what perfectly optimal reasoning or optimal reasoning for humans would be. For humans, this way is the scientific method with the current body of work pointing to logic, probability and decision theory as having the closest answers on what it means to reason optimally, i.e. be rational. These answers aren’t necessarily correct due to negative pragmatism etc. They are just our current, best and most informed guesses.
There are also questions about defining rationality as optimality. Optimality typically involves maximizing some measure, but in a lot of situations what matters is not how to reach the maximum, but rather what is it that you optimize. Is it "rational" to arrive at an optimum for the wrong thing?
I always thought that this was a part of what it means to be instrumentally rational. Basically to have optimal goals as well. This is my problem with instrumental rationality as it's talked about on less wrong is about achieving what you value at a reasonable cost or is it about making your values coherent and in line with what you innately value or is it a combination of the two. I have always felt that instrumental rationality is a bit too overreaching and encompassing. Do you think I should split it into two types of instrumental rationality? One for costs and one for value alignment or am I not interpreting it correctly.
Notice that keeping epistemic and instrumental rationality separate works much better.
I will have other posts where I go into detail on each of these separately. I think that they are separate skills or areas of expertise, but I also think that there should be a base reason for why we should care about them.
and think about what reasoning is aimed at achieving
So do you want to define "rationality" as a kind of reasoning? Reasoning is an opaque mental process and, for example, does not include acting which is a large part of instrumental rationality. Procrastination is a classic LW sin, but it's not a reasoning problem. And what would be non-rational reasoning besides straightforward logical errors? The great majority of thinking people do throughout the day is not formalizable into a neat system of propositions and conclusions.
...It is about actu
A perfect rationalist is an ideal thinker. Rationality ↓, however, is not the same as perfection. Perfection guarantees optimal outcomes. Rationality only guarantees that the agent will, to the utmost of their abilities, reason optimally. Optimal reasoning cannot, unfortunately, guarantee optimal outcomes. This is because most agents are not omniscient or omnipotent. They are instead fundamentally and inexorably limited. To be fair to such agents, the definition of rationality that we use should take this into account. Therefore, a rational agent will be defined as: an agent that, given its capabilities and the situation it is in, thinks and acts optimally. Although it is noted that rationality does not guarantee the best outcome, a rational agent will most of the time achieve better outcomes than those of an irrational agent.
Rationality is often considered to be split into three parts: normative, descriptive and prescriptive rationality.
Normative rationality describes the laws of thought and action. That is, how a perfectly rational agent with unlimited computing power, omniscience etc. would reason and act. Normative rationality basically describes what is meant by the phrase "optimal reasoning". Of course, for limited agents true optimal reasoning is impossible and they must instead settle for bounded optimal reasoning, which is the closest approximation to optimal reasoning that is possible given the information available to the agent and the computational abilities of the agent. The laws of thought and action (what we currently believe optimal reasoning involves) are::
Descriptive rationality describes how people normally reason and act. It is about understanding how and why people make decisions. As humans, we have certain limitations and adaptations which quite often makes it impossible for us to be perfectly rational in the normative sense of the word. It is because of this that we must satisfice or approximate the normative rationality model as best we can. We engage in what's called bounded, ecological or grounded rationality ↓ . Unless explicitly stated otherwise, 'rationality' in this compendium will refer to rationality in the bounded sense of the word. In this sense, it means that the most rational choice for an agent depends on the agents capabilities and the information that is available to it. The most rational choice for an agent is not necessarily the most certain, true or right one. It is just the best one given the information and capabilities that the agent has. This means that an agent that satisfices or uses heuristics may actually be reasoning optimally, given its limitations, even though satisficing and heuristics are shortcuts that are potentially error prone.
Prescriptive or applied rationality is essentially about how to bring the thinking of limited agents closer to what the normative model stipulates. It is described by Baron in Thinking and Deciding ↓ pg.34:
The behaviours and thoughts that we consider to be rational for limited agents is much larger than those for the perfect, i.e. unlimited, agents. This is because for the limited agents we need to take into account, not only those thoughts and behaviours which are optimal for the agent, but also those thoughts and behaviours which allow the limited agent to improve their reasoning. It is for this reason that we consider curiousity, for example, to be rational as it often leads to situations in which the agents improve their internal representations or models of the world. We also consider wise resource allocation to be rational because limited agents only have a limited amount of resources available to them. Therefore, if they can get a greater return on investment on the resources that they do use then they will be more likely to be able to get closer to thinking optimally in a greater number of domains.
We also consider the rationality of particuar choices to be something that is in a state of flux. This is because the rationality of choices depends on the information that an agent has access to and this is something which is frequently changing. This hopefully highlights an important fact. If an agent is suboptimal in its ability to gather information, then it will often end up with different information than an agent with optimal informational gathering abilities would. In short, this is a problem for the suboptimal (irrational) agent as it means that its rational choices are going to differ more from the perfect normative agents than the rational agents would. The closer an agents rational choices are to the rational choices of a perfect normative agent the more that the agent is rational.
It can also be said that the rationality of an agent depends in large part on the agents truth seeking abilities. The more accurate and up to date the agents view of the world the closer its rational choices will be to those of the perfect normative agents. It is because of this that a rational agent is one that is inextricably tied to the world as it is. It does not see the world as it wishes it, fears it or has seen it to be, but instead constantly adapts to and seeks out feedback from interactions with the world. The rational agent is attuned to the current state of affairs. One other very important characteristic of rational agents is that they adapt. If the situation has changed and the previously rational choice is no longer the one with the greatest expected utility, then the rational agent will adapt and change its preferred choice to the one that is now the most rational.
The other important part of rationality, besides truth seeking, is that it is about maximising the ability to actually achieve important goals. These two parts or domains of rationality: truth seeking and goal reaching are referred to as epistemic and instrumental rationality. ↓
As you move further and further away from rationality you introduce more and more flaws, inefficiencies and problems into your decision making and information gathering algorithms. These flaws and inefficiencies are the cause of irrational or suboptimal behaviors, choices and decisions. Humans are innately irrational in a large number of areas which is why, in large part, improving our rationality is just about mitigating, as much as possible, the influence of our biases and irrational propensities.
If you wish to truly understand what it means to be rational, then you must also understand what rationality is not. This is important because the concept of rationality is often misconstrued by the media. An epitomy of this misconstrual is the character of Spock from Star Trek. This character does not see rationality as if it was about optimality, but instead as if it means that ↓:
Related Materials
Wikis:
Posts:
Suggested posts to write:
Academic Books:
Popular Books:
Notes on decisions I have made while creating this post
(these notes will not be in the final draft):