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    Global rationality fails to adequately describe actual hu... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Global rationality is a reasonable normative standard but problematic as a descriptive theory of human judgment and decision-making

    Global rationality fails to adequately describe actual human judgment and decision-making behavior

    Consciousness & MindTruth & Knowledge
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    Aumann's first four arguments implicitly treat global rationality as a reasonabl...Global rationality is a reasonable normative standard but problematic as a descr...

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    Global rationality is a reasonable normative standard but problematic ...91%Strong rationality requires that an action be best for the player unde...83%Overall rationality is the all-things-considered perspective that acco...83%Minimal rationality only requires that an agent make some valid infere...82%

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    Implicit in Aumann’s first four arguments is the notion that global rationality (section 2) is a reasonable normative standard but problematic for descriptive theories of human judgment and decision-making (section 8). Even the literature standing behind Aumann’s fifth argument, namely that there are problems with expected utility theory as a normative standard, nevertheless typically address those shortcomings through modifications to, or extensions of, the underlying mathematical theory (

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