Introduction
Part I. Decision Theory for Cooperative Decision-Making: 1. Shared preferences of two Bayesian decision makers
2. Decisions without ordering
3. A representation of partially ordered preferences
Part II. The Truth about Consequences: 4. Separating probability elicitation from utilities
5. State-dependent utilities
6. Shared preferences and state-dependent utilities
7. A conflict between finitely additive probability and avoiding Dutch book
8. Statistical implications of finitely additive probability
Part III. Non-Cooperative Decision Making, Inference, and Learning with Shared Evidence: 9. Subjective probability and the theory of games
10. Equilibrium, common knowledge, and optimal sequential decisions
11. A fair minimax theorem for 2 person (zero-sum) games involving finitely additive strategies
12. Randomization in a Bayesian perspective
13. Characterizations of externally Bayesian pooling operators
14. An approach to consensus and certainty with increasing evidence
15. Reasoning to a foregone conclusion
16. When several Bayesians agree that there will be no reasoning to a foregone conclusion.