Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 February 2010
Introduction
I want to extend here a line of reasoning that I pursued in Rationality and Dynamic Choice (1990). In that book I argued that the standard Bayesian model of expected-utility reasoning needs to be revised to accommodate a capacity, on the part of rational decision makers, to effectively coordinate with their own future selves – to be guided by plans that they have deliberately adopted. I also suggested that an analogous line of reasoning might be employed to show that rational agents could engage in a coordination of their choices with others to a greater extent than the standard theory would seem to admit and, in particular, that they could achieve coordination by following mutually accepted rules. It is this suggestion that I now want to explore more fully. It is not that the standard theory altogether denies the possibility of such coordination. Rather, on its view, rational agents will be disposed to free-ride on the cooperative efforts of others and thus effective cooperation will require the adoption of a system of surveillance and sanctions. In addition, it views the terms of the agreements that rational agents reach as driven by essentially noncooperative considerations, such as the relative bargaining power of the participants. But enforcement schemes require the expenditure of scarce resources, and bargaining based on the principle of to each according to threat advantage tends to generate destabilizing and mutually disadvantageous conflict. The two problems, moreover, appear to be connected in an important way. The sense that one's relationship to others is defined by relative threat advantage is likely to contribute to one's disposition to free-ride whenever one can.
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