Counterfactual Reasoning and Common Knowledge of Rationality in Normal Form Games
A BEJTE Topics article.
Abstract
When evaluating the rationality of a player in a game one has to examine counterfactuals such as "what would happen if the player were to do what he does not do?" In this paper I develop a model of a normal form game where counterfactuals of this sort are evaluated as in the philosophical literature (cf. Lewis, 1973; Stalnaker, 1968). According to this method one evaluates a statement like ``what would the player believe if he were to do what he does not do'' at the world that is closest to the actual world where the hypothetical deviation occurs. I show that in this model common knowledge of rationality need not lead to rationalizability. I also present assumptions that allow rationalizability to follow from common knowledge of rationality. These assumptions suggest that rationalizability may not rely on weaker assumptions about belief consistency than Nash equilibrium.Submitted: December 21, 2000 · Accepted: October 31, 2004 · Published: November 10, 2004
Originally published in Topics in Theoretical Economics.
Recommended Citation
Zambrano, Eduardo
(2004)
"Counterfactual Reasoning and Common Knowledge of Rationality in Normal Form Games,"
Topics in Theoretical Economics:
Vol. 4
:
Iss.
1, Article 8.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/bejte/topics/vol4/iss1/art8
