Principe de rationalité


Révision datée du 19 avril 2019 à 20:45 par Claude COULOMBE (discussion | contributions) (nouveau terme)

Domaine


Intelligence artificielle
Philosophie de l'IA
Agent intelligent
Coulombe

Définition

Selon la formulation de Karl Popper vers 1967, le «principe de rationalité» établit que les agents agissent de la façon la plus adéquate à une situation objective donnée. Le «principe de rationalité» est vu par certains comme un élément unificateur des sciences sociales susceptible d'expliquer le comportement humain.


Français

principe de rationalité


Source:

https://www.cairn.info/revue-economique-2002-2-page-301.htm#

Anglais

Principle of rationality

The 'principle of rationality' (or 'rationality principle') was coined by Karl R. Popper in his Harvard Lecture of 1963, and published in his book Myth of Framework.[1] It is related to what he called the 'logic of the situation' in an Economica article of 1944/1945, published later in his book The Poverty of Historicism.[2] According to Popper’s rationality principle, agents act in the most adequate way according to the objective situation. It is an idealized conception of human behavior which he used to drive his model of situational analysis.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principle_of_rationality