Over the past 20 years or so, a small but growing literature has emerged with the aim of modeling agents who are unaware of certain things. In this paper we compare two different approaches to modeling unawareness: the object-based approach of Board and Chung (Object-based unawareness: theory and applications. University of Minnesota, Mimeo, 2008) and the subjective-state-space approach of Heifetz et al. (J Econ Theory 130:78-94, 2006). In particular, we show that subjective-state-space models (henceforth HMS structures) can be embedded within object-based models (henceforth OBU structures), demonstrating that the latter are at least as expressive. As long as certain restrictions are imposed on the form of the OBU structure, the embedding can also go the other way. A generalization of HMS structures (relaxing the partitional properties of knowledge) gives us a full converse. © 2010 The Author(s).
CITATION STYLE
Board, O. J., Chung, K. S., & Schipper, B. C. (2011). Two models of unawareness: Comparing the object-based and the subjective-state-space approaches. Synthese, 179(SUPPL. 1), 13–34. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-010-9850-z
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