Language and Coordination
Convention in the Theory of Meaning
Mind Idea of a Dog Dog
ConnotesDog
Mind Idea of a Dog Dog
Conventional RelationDog
The Absurdity of Fit
The “convention” that associates an idea with a word can’t just be due to the person using the word.
This is because you can use a word wrongly, even if it’s in accord with your idea.
Mind Idea of a Dog Dog
Personally AssociatesDog
Mind Idea of a Dog Dog
Still MeansDog
Mind Experience of a wound
Dagger
“Dagger”
Connotes
Mind Experience of a wound
Dagger
“Dagger”
Conventional Relation
Mind Experience of a wound
Dagger
“Dagger”
Personally Associates
Mind Experience of a wound
Dagger
“Dagger”
Still Means
Mind Definition of “Dog”
Dog
ConnotesDog
Mind Definition of “Dog”
Dog
Conventional RelationDog
Mind Definition of “Dog”
Dog
Personally AssociatesDog
Dog. n. A deer, a female deer.
Mind Definition of “Dog”
Dog
Still MeansDog
Dog. n. A deer, a female deer.
The Causal-Historical Theory
Even in the case of the causal-historical theory (where there is no denotation), it seems as though what the community calls things is important.
Let’s call that place ‘Mogadishu’
MadagascarMadagasceirMadagascuMadagishu
Denotation
The Use Theory
What about the use theory? Doesn’t Horwich explicitly argue that meaning is not a conventional relation, but rather a natural one?
Indication
Smoke means (indicates the presence of) fire.
The Use Theory
and
ANDmeans
Horwich Is Wrong
But Horwich is wrong: the connection between smoke and fire is grounded in the laws of the universe.
The connection between a word and the concept it expresses is wholly conventional.
The Use Theory
gift
GIFT
gift
POISON
Game Theory
DecisionsSometimes what happens to us depends entirely on what we do, and not on what other people do.
This doesn’t mean that decision making in such cases is easy or trivial. For example, suppose someone’s life is on the line, and it is my job to decide whether to convict or acquit them.
Decision under Risk
Innocent Guilty
Conviction Very Bad Good
Acquittal
Good Bad
Decision Theory
A number of factors are relevant here:• How likely do I think it is that the person committed the crime?• How much worse is it to convict an innocent person than to let a
guilty one go?
Decision theory is devoted to telling us how to act when we must make decisions under risk.
GamesSometimes what happens to us does depend on what others do as well.
• Whether I have a good time tonight depends not just on whether I go to the party, but on whether other people come too.• Whether I win a chess match depends not just on the moves I make,
but the moves my opponent makes as well. • Whether nuclear disarmament is good depends on whether my
enemies disarm as well.
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
Great
Great
Amazing
Terrible
Don’t Disarm
Bad
Good
Acceptable
Acceptable
Numbers
In game theory we usually use numbers to represent the value of an outcome.
I won’t go into how we assign the numbers… let’s say we just make them up.
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0
EquilibriaAn equilibrium point is a square on the grid where no player can improve his position through unilateral deviation.
Unilateral deviation is when one player changes strategy and all the other players do not.
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0
?
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0
?
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0?
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0?
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0
?
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0
?
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0?
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0Equilibrium
Dominance
A dominant strategy is one where a player gets a better outcome, regardless of what the other player does.
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0
Dominant
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0
Dominant
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0
Dominant
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0Not Dominant
The Disarmament GameCountry 2
Country 1
Disarm Don’t Disarm
Disarm
10
10
15
-15
Don’t Disarm
-5
5
0
0Not Dominant
Equilibria as Solutions
An equilibrium strategy is a “solution” to a game. It’s what we predict will happen, and it’s what “rational” players will choose.
John Nash proved that there’s always an equilibrium (if we allow mixed strategies).
The Prisoner’s Dilemma
Two people are arrested for a crime. The police do not have enough evidence to convict them of that crime, but they can convict them of a lesser crime, and send them to prison for a year.
The Prisoner’s DilemmaHowever, they are offered the chance to confess to the more serious crime:• If Prisoner 1 confesses and Prisoner 2 does not, 1 goes free and 2 gets
a long prison sentence.• If Prisoner 2 confesses and Prisoner 1 does not, 2 goes free and 1 gets
a long prison sentence.• If both confess, each gets a 5 year sentence.• If neither confess, both get a 1 year sentence.
The Prisoner’s DilemmaPrisoner 2
Prisoner 1
Confess Stay Silent
Confess
-5
-5
-10
0
Stay Silent
0
-10
-1
-1
Confessing is DominantPlayer 1 can reason as follows:
If 2 confesses, I’m better off confessing, because 5 years in prison is better than 10.If 2 doesn’t confess, then I’m better off confessing, because 0 years in prison is better than 1.Therefore, I should confess.
The Prisoner’s DilemmaPrisoner 2
Prisoner 1
Confess Stay Silent
Confess
-5
-5
-10
0
Stay Silent
0
-10
-1
-1
Equilibrium
The Prisoner’s DilemmaPrisoner 2
Prisoner 1
Confess Stay Silent
Confess
-5
-5
-10
0
Stay Silent
0
-10
-1
-1
Equilibrium
Clearly Better!
The Evolution of MoralitySome philosophers have suggested that the point of moral rules is to avoid rational-but-worse outcomes. Cases where it’s good for you if you do X, but bad if everyone does X.• Don’t rat out your friends.• Put trash in the garbage cans.• Let passengers alight first.• Wait your turn in line.• Don’t steal.• Don’t kill people over disagreements.
Coordination Problems
Example 1: Meeting
Suppose two people want to meet, but they have no way of communicating with each other.
It does not matter where they go, as long as they go to the same place.
Example 2: Driving
Cars have just come to our country. We have plenty of roads to drive on, but sometimes they are winding and we cannot see who is coming.
It doesn’t matter what side of the street we drive on– right or left– as long as everyone drives on the same side.
Example 3: Searching
Suppose we are camping and need firewood. It would be bad if any of us searched places that others have already looked. Thus we each want to cover different ground.
It doesn’t matter to any person which direction he goes in, as long as he goes in a direction no one else goes in.
Example 4: Dressing/ Fashion
We are all going to a party. It would be bad to dress in suits if everyone at the party is wearing blue jeans and t-shirts. Similarly, it would be bad to wear jeans and a t-shirt to a party where everyone was wearing suits.
It doesn’t matter to us what we wear as long as we are wearing what everyone else is wearing.
Example 5: Money
Throughout history, people have used different things as money: gold, silver, sea shells, salt (whence ‘salary’), goats, cigarettes (in prison), coins and paper currency.
It doesn’t matter to me what I accept in exchange for my goods and labor as long as it’s what everyone else accepts (as long as I can spend it).
Example? Language
Suppose I want to talk about dogs.
It doesn’t matter what word I use, so long as it’s the word everyone else uses to talk about dogs.
Suggestion
Maybe language is a coordination problem and can be understood through game theory! Here are some thoughts about what’s similar in these cases:• The solutions to all our problems are equilibrium points. (For
example: no one benefits by unilaterally deviating from the rule “drive on the left”).• There are multiple equilibrium points. (Example: drive on the left OR
drive on the right).
The Meeting GamePerson 2
Person 1
Place 1 Place 2
Place 1
1
1
0
0
Place 2
0
0
1
1
The Meaning GamePerson 2
Person 1
“Dog” “Chien”
“Dog”
1
1
0
0
“Chien”
0
0
1
1
Conventions
The problem here is different from the Prisoner’s Dilemma. There we had to move people away from an equilibrium point to a different point.
In coordination problems we have to get everyone to the same equilibrium. Next time we’ll talk about how conventions are used to solve coordination problems