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On the currently dominant reading of the Groundwork, Kant’s derivation of ‘imperatives of duty’ exemplifies a decision procedure for the derivation of concrete duties in moral deliberation. However, Kant’s response to an often-misidentified criticism of the Groundwork by G. A. Tittel suggests that Kant was remarkably unconcerned with arguing for the practicality of the categorical imperative as a decision procedure. Instead, I argue that the main aim of Kant’s derivation of imperatives of duty was to show how his analysis of the form of moral judgement is indeed presupposed in the four types of moral imperative that philosophers of his time recognized.
We show that the first-order logical theory of the binary overlap-free words (and, more generally, the $\alpha $-free words for rational $\alpha $, $2 < \alpha \leq 7/3$), is decidable. As a consequence, many results previously obtained about this class through tedious case-based proofs can now be proved “automatically,” using a decision procedure, and new claims can be proved or disproved simply by restating them as logical formulas.
Heinrich Behmann (1891–1970) obtained his Habilitation under David Hilbert in Göttingen in 1921 with a thesis on the decision problem. In his thesis, he solved—independently of Löwenheim and Skolem’s earlier work—the decision problem for monadic second-order logic in a framework that combined elements of the algebra of logic and the newer axiomatic approach to logic then being developed in Göttingen. In a talk given in 1921, he outlined this solution, but also presented important programmatic remarks on the significance of the decision problem and of decision procedures more generally. The text of this talk as well as a partial English translation are included.
This paper is concerned with the general problem of finding an optimal transition matrix for a finite Markov chain, where the probabilities for each transition must be chosen from a given convex family of distributions. The immediate cost is determined by this choice, but it is required to minimise the average expected cost in the long run. The problem is investigated by classifying the states according to the accessibility relations between them. If an optimal policy exists, it can be found by considering the convex subsystems associated with the states at different levels in the classification scheme.
A Markov process in discrete time with a finite state space is controlled by choosing the transition probabilities from a given convex family of distributions depending on the present state. The immediate cost is prescribed for each choice and it is required to minimise the average expected cost over an infinite future. The paper considers a special case of this general problem and provides the foundation for a general solution. The main result is that an optimal policy exists if each state of the system can be reached with positive probability from any other state by choosing a suitable policy.
A Markov process in discrete time with a finite state space is controlled by choosing the transition probabilities from a prescribed set depending on the state occupied at any time. Given the immediate cost for each choice, it is required to minimise the expected cost over an infinite future, without discounting. Various techniques are reviewed for the case when there is a finite set of possible transition matrices and an example is given to illustrate the unpredictable behaviour of policy sequences derived by backward induction. Further examples show that the existing methods may break down when there is an infinite family of transition matrices. A new approach is suggested, based on the idea of classifying the states according to their accessibility from one another.
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