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    Human agents face resource limitations that make computat... — Carmelics
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    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→The use of heuristics—including potentially unsound ones—can fall within a generalized account of rationality.

    Human agents face resource limitations that make computationally optimal reasoning infeasible.

    Consciousness & MindMoral Responsibility
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    Moral ResponsibilityConsciousness & Mind

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    A theory of rationality informed by computational complexity theory should accom...Heuristics considered by cognitive psychologists may be of benefit to agents in ...The use of heuristics—including potentially unsound ones—can fall within a gener...

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    Human agents face resource limitations in everyday decision making.84%Both memory and reasoning capacities of real agents are limited.82%The agent's bounded computational resources constrain which decision p...81%Real cognitive agents have limited memory and reasoning capacities.80%

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    SEP: computational-complexity
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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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