If you have a program structure that can make decisions that would otherwise 
be vetoed by the utility function, but get through because it isn't executed 
at the right time, to me that's just a bug.

Josh


On Thursday 12 June 2008 09:02:35 am, Mark Waser wrote:
> > If you have a fixed-priority utility function, you can't even THINK ABOUT 
> > the
> > choice. Your pre-choice function will always say "Nope, that's bad" and
> > you'll be unable to change. (This effect is intended in all the RSI 
> > stability
> > arguments.)
> 
> Doesn't that depend upon your architecture and exactly *when* the pre-choice 
> function executes?  If the pre-choice function operates immediately 
> pre-choice and only then, it doesn't necessarily interfere with option 
> exploration.
> 


-------------------------------------------
agi
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