Transcript Convention
Convention
Recap
What We’re Doing
The relation between a word and its meaning is conventional.
To understand this we want to know what a convention is. To do that
we are using certain ideas from game theory:
• Equilibrium point
• Coordination problem
The Disarmament Game
Country 2
Disarm
Don’t Disarm
10
15
Country 1
Disarm
10
-15
-5
Don’t Disarm
5
0
0
Equilibria
An 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 Game
Country 2
Disarm
Don’t Disarm
10
15
Country 1
Disarm
10
-15
-5
0
Equilibrium
Don’t Disarm
5
0
Coordination Problems
A coordination problem is a game where there are multiple equilibrium
points. The problem is to “coordinate”: make sure we play strategies
that will put us at the equilibrium points.
The Meeting Game
Person 2
Place 1
Place 2
1
0
Person 1
Place 1
1
0
0
Place 2
0
1
1
The Meaning Game
Person 2
“Dog”
“Chien”
1
0
Person 1
“Dog”
1
0
0
“Chien”
0
1
1
Conventions
Solving Coordination Problems
How do you solve a coordination problem? Two ways are salience and
precedent.
Example: 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.
Salience
Suppose you and a friend are in a strange city and you get split up. It
doesn’t matter where you go, as long as your friend goes there to.
Where should you go?
Your goal is to guess where your friend will go and go there. The
salience of a location can suggest it as a good meeting place.
Precedent
If you’ve successfully navigated this situation before you might choose
to meet at wherever you met before.
Convention
Finally, if you get in situations like this a lot, you might have a
conventional rule that you follow for what to do.
Example: my wife and I have the rule: always meet at Exit A of the
closest MTR station.
Convention: First Definition
It is a convention for a group to follow a rule in a certain situation, if
whenever they are in that situation:
1. Everyone follows the rule.
2. Everyone expects everyone else to follow the rule.
3. The situation is a coordination problem.
4. Everyone following the rule is a solution to the coordination
problem.
5. The reason why they follow the rule is (3) and (4).
Example: 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).
The Currency Game
Person 2
Accepts HKD
Accepts AUD
100
-500
Person 1
Accepts HKD
100
-500
-500
Accepts AUD
-500
100
100
Accepting HKD is Conventional
It is a convention for Hong Kongers to follow the rule “accept HKD” in
exchange for goods and services, because:
1. Everyone gets paid in HKD and makes purchases with HKD.
2. Everyone expects everyone else to accept payment and make
purchases with HKD.
3. Which currency to accept is a coordination problem.
4. Everyone accepting HKD is an equilibrium point in that problem.
5. The reason why we follow the rule is (3) and (4).
Not All Rules Are Conventions
• Laws contain lots of rules. Many of these are not conventions: the
reason we obey the law is not because other people do, it’s because
we will be punished (however, compare driving on the right).
• Mathematics textbooks contain rules for calculating the values of
certain functions. Again, when we follow these rules it is not because
others do– it’s because they get us the right answer!
• Moral rules?
Language and Convention
Many aspects of language are also conventional:
• The meaning of each word.
• Some facts about the grammar.
• How the words get pronounced.
What the Word Means
Person 2
“dog”
“dog”
1
0
Person 1
“dog”
1
0
0
“dog”
0
1
1
Word Order
Person 2
SOV
SVO
1
0
Person 1
SOV
1
0
0
SVO
0
1
1
What Word We Use
Person 2
“Dog”
“Chien”
1
0
Person 1
“Dog”
1
0
0
“Chien”
0
1
1
Not Everything Conventional
“Certainly not every feature of a
language is conventional. No
humanly possible language relies
on ultrasonic whistles, so it is not
by convention that Welshmen do
not… but so long as even two
languages are humanly possible, it
must be by convention that a
population chooses to use one or
the other.” – David Lewis
Common Knowledge
City of Gold
Jungle of Danger
War Games
General 2
Attacks at Dawn
Does Not Attack
Victory!
Escape
General 1
Attacks at Dawn
Victory!
Death
Death
Does Not Attack
Escape
Victory!
Victory!
A Messenger
General 1 wants to let General 2 know that he (G1) wants to attack at
dawn.
So he sends a messenger through the Jungle of Danger, with the hopes
that he will get through the snipers and snakes.
A Worry
General 1 is still worried: Did the messenger survive?
I know that I want to attack at dawn,
But I do not know that General 2 knows that I want to attack at dawn.
If he doesn’t know this then he might not attack at dawn.
A New Messenger
Luckily a new messenger arrives from the Jungle of Danger. The
messenger says, “General 2 got your message!”
General 1 feels relieved.
A New Worry
But something is still wrong. General 1 now has a new worry:
I know that I want to attack at dawn.
And I know that General 2 knows that I want to attack at dawn.
But General 2 doesn’t know that I know that General 2 knows that I
want to attack at dawn.
If he doesn’t know this he might not attack at dawn.
Another Messenger
So General 1 sends another messenger into the Jungle of Danger to tell
General 2 that General 1 got G2’s message that G2 got G1’s original
message.
Another message comes back from General 2 saying he got the latest
message. General 1 feels relieved.
Another Worry
But something is still wrong. General 1 now has a new worry:
I know that I want to attack at dawn.
And I know that General 2 knows that I want to attack at dawn.
And I know that General 2 knows that I know that General 2 knows that
I want to attack at dawn.
But General 2 doesn’t know that I know that G2 knows that I know that
G2 knows that I want to attack at dawn.
If he doesn’t know this he might not attack at dawn.
Common Knowledge
What the generals need is what Lewis calls common knowledge. It’s
common knowledge among a group that P:
• Everyone knows that P
• Everyone knows that everyone knows that P
• Everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows that P
• Etc.
Common Knowledge
Common knowledge might seem hard to get, but that’s not true.
Imagine that there is no Jungle of Danger and the generals just meet
the night before the attack.
City of Gold
Attack at dawn!
General 1 Reasons…
I know that G2 will attack at dawn, because he saw me say “Attack at
dawn!”
And I know G2 knows that I know that G2 will attack at dawn, because
he saw me see him see me say “Attack at dawn!”
And I know that G2 knows that I know G2 knows that I know that G2
will attack at dawn, because he saw me see him seeing me seeing him
see me say “Attack at dawn!”
Lewis argues that conventions require not just following rules, but
common knowledge.
Convention: Second Definition
It is a convention for a group to follow a rule in a certain situation, if
whenever they are in that situation:
1. It’s common knowledge that everyone follows the rule.
2. It’s common knowledge that everyone expects everyone else to
follow the rule.
3. It’s common knowledge that it is a coordination problem.
4. Everyone following the rule is a solution to the coordination
problem.
5. It’s common knowledge that the reason why they follow the rule is
(3) and (4).