Chapter 3. Assessing Promises

The value of promising depends entirely on how it is assessed. Assessment of promises is an inherently subjective matter. Each agent may arrive at a different assessment, based on its observations. For instance, “I am/am not satisfied with the meal at the restaurant.” Agent 1 might have the gene allele that makes cilantro/coriander taste like soap, while agent 2 is a devoted Thai food enthusiast extraordinaire. Assessments must therefore respect the individuality or relativity of different agents’ perspectives.

What We Mean by Assessment

When we make a promise, we often have in mind a number of things:

  • The promise itself: what outcome we intend

  • The algorithm used to keep it: how a promise will be kept

  • The motive behind it: why a promise is made

  • The context in which it’s kept: where, when a promise is made

Someone assessing a promise might care about exactly how a promise is kept, but the promiser may or may not promise to use a particular method. In that case, the precise method becomes a part of the intended outcome too, and there might be unfulfilled expectations of promises broken by failing to follow a very specific sequence of actions. Similarly, there are corresponding elements of assessing whether a promise has been kept.

  • Outcome: What was measured during the assessment?

  • Context: Where was the sample taken?

  • Algorithm: How was the sample taken?

  • Motive: Why the assessment was made?

  • Expectation: What were we expecting to ...

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