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    Human agents face real resource limitations in everyday d... — Carmelics
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    Supports→A minimally rational agent need only make some of the valid inferences that follow from the agent's beliefs, not all of them.

    Human agents face real resource limitations in everyday decision making.

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    A minimally rational agent need only make some of the valid inferences that foll...A theory of rationality must be responsive to complexity-theoretic results about...Full deductive closure is computationally infeasible for resource-limited agents...

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    Human agents face resource limitations in everyday decision making.99%Both memory and reasoning capacities of real agents are limited.82%Bounded agents may miss the longer horizon due to their cognitive limi...77%Real cognitive agents have limited memory and reasoning capacities.74%

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    Note, however, that such theorists are typically careful to avoid explicitly asserting that there are only finitely many feasible numbers. g. those given in the formulation of (S2). Certainly the claim that there is a largest feasibly constructible number would invite the challenge that the strict finitist nominate such a number \(n\). And any such nomination would in turn invite the rejoinder that if \(n\) is feasibly constructible, then \(n+1\) must be as well. But in the sort of model \(\math

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