Abstract
Causal decision theory is a general theory of rational decision, appropriate for simple or complex decision problems. It is an expected utility theory distinguished by its explicit attention to causal features of decision problems, and by the significance it attaches to those features. When the causal structure of a decision problem is uncomplicated, the recommendations of CDT and other theories generally agree. In more complex cases, however, CDT identifies rational decisions where other theories do not. Several varieties of CDT have been offered; they differ in their ways of representing beliefs about causal influence, but as decision theories they are very similar. Each of them was developed as a subjective expected utility theory, and that approach will be assumed here.