Another related, much older reference is from Ramsey's Truth and Probability (1926) in which he relates risk attitudes to preferences over repeated experiences (it's in the single person case however):
"We can put this in a different way. Suppose his degree of belief in p is mn ; then his action is such as he would choose it to be if he had to repeat it exactly n times, in m of which p was true, and in the others false. [Here it may be necessary to suppose that in each of the n times he had n... (read more)
Another related, much older reference is from Ramsey's Truth and Probability (1926) in which he relates risk attitudes to preferences over repeated experiences (it's in the single person case however):
"We can put this in a different way. Suppose his degree of belief in p is mn ; then his action is such as he would choose it to be if he had to repeat it exactly n times, in m of which p was true, and in the others false. [Here it may be necessary to suppose that in each of the n times he had n... (read more)