Central and East European
Society for Phenomenology

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238654

Standard and non-standard Newcomb problems

William J. Talbott

pp. 415-458

Abstract

Examples involving common causes — most prominently, examples involving genetically influenced choices — are analytically equivalent not to standard Newcomb Problems — in which the Predictor genuinely predicts the agent's decision — but to non-standard Newcomb Problems — in which the Predictor guarantees the truth of her “predictions” by interfering with the agent's decision to make the agent choose as it was “predicted” she would. When properly qualified, causal and epistemic decision theories diverge only on standard — not on non-standard — Newcomb Problems, and thus not on examples involving common causes.

Publication details

Published in:

(1987) Synthese 70 (3).

Pages: 415-458

DOI: 10.1007/BF00414158

Full citation:

Talbott William J. (1987) „Standard and non-standard Newcomb problems“. Synthese 70 (3), 415–458.