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Croatian Journal of Philosophy


Issue no.11 /2004


Publisher:

KruZak

  Address: Zastavnice 29
Zagreb/Hrvatski Leskovac (10251), Croatia
  Phone: +38516590417
  Fax: +38516590416
  eMail: kruzak@kruzak.hr

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 Articles 
    
Response–Intentionalism About Color: A Sketch    
The Knowledge Argument—Some Comments    
Crane on the Mind–Body Problem and Emergence    
Tim Crane on the Internalism–Externalism Debate    
Crane on Intentionality and Consciousness: A Few Questions    
Summary of Elements of Mind and Replies to Critics    
Rationality and the Emotions    
On Wakker’s Critique of Allais–Preferences    
Translated Title: On Wakker’s Critique of Allais–Preferences
Publication: Croatian Journal of Philosophy (11/2004)
Author Name: Sobel, Jordan Howard;
Language: English
Subject: Philosophy
Issue: 11/2004
Page Range: 253-272
No. of Pages: 20
File size: 104 KB
Download Fee: 4 Euro (€)
Summary: Peter Wakker impugns the rationality of Allais–preferences. He argues implicitly that otherwise perfectly reasonable subjects who have Allais–preferences will in some situations choose to bet on propositions before, rather than after, learning of their truth–values. After spelling out Wakker’s argument, and identifying and repairing a weak point, I turn it around to say that aversions to information, and preferring to bet on propositions without knowing their truth–values, can be reasonable on precisely the grounds that can make Allais–preferences reasonable. Lastly, to accommodate reasonable Allais–preferences, the normative principle of Utility Theory is restricted to pairwise preferences for lotteries the basic outcomes of which are ‘loaded up’, and, of course, to preferences for lotteries that are ‘comparable as alternatives’.
Some Epistemological Consequences of The Dual–Aspect Theory of Visual Perception    
The Contingent A Priori: Much Ado about Nothing    
T. Szabo Gendler and J. Hawthorne (eds.), Conceivability and Possibility    
Pierre Jacob and Marc Jannerod, Ways of Seeing: The Scope and Limits of Visual Cognition