Agent Decision Act
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A Agent Decision Act is an agent act that performs decision-making for choice tasks.
- Context:
- It can execute Decision Process through choice mechanisms and agent intentions.
- It can implement Choice Selection through agent motives and decision criteria.
- It can perform Decision Making for both individual agents and mechanical agents.
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- It can range from being a Individual Agent Decision Act to being a Collective Decision Act, depending on its agent count.
- It can range from being a Positive Agent Decision Act to being a Negative Agent Decision Act, depending on its outcome impact.
- It can range from being a Forced Decision Act to being an Unforced Decision Act, depending on its choice freedom.
- It can range from being a Voluntary Decision Act to being an Involuntary Decision Act, depending on its agent control.
- It can range from being an Explicit Agent Decision Act to being an Implicit Agent Decision Act, depending on its decision visibility.
- It can range from being a Random Choice to being a Deliberate Agent Decision, depending on its decision method.
- It can range from being a Subjective Choice to being an Objective Choice, depending on its decision basis.
- It can range from being a Living Organism Decision to being a Mechanical Agent Decision, depending on its agent type.
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- It can integrate with Agent Motive for decision driving.
- It can connect with Agent Intention for decision planning.
- It can lead to Agent Act for decision execution.
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- Examples:
- Biological Decision Acts, such as:
- Survival Decisions, such as:
- Basic Function Decisions, such as:
- Economic Decision Acts, such as:
- Consumer Decisions, such as:
- Professional Decisions, such as:
- Game Decision Acts, such as:
- Moral Decision Acts, such as:
- Ethical Choices, such as:
- Time Management Decisions, such as:
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- Biological Decision Acts, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- Group Decision Act, which requires collective consensus rather than individual choice.
- Involuntary Act, which lacks conscious decision making.
- Unintentional Act, which occurs without deliberate choice.
- Unwillingness to Act, which represents decision avoidance.
- Predetermined Choice, which lacks actual decision freedom.
- Mechanistic Decision Act, which follows fixed rules without agency.
- Judging Act, which evaluates rather than decides.
- See: Formal Game, Causal Relation, Preference, Courageous Act.