Another part of the idea (not fully explained in Scott’s post I referenced earlier) is that nonexploited bargaining (AKA bargaining away from the pareto fronteir AKA cooperating with agents with different notions of fairness) provides a model of why agents should not just take pareto improvements all the time, and may therefore be a seed of “non-Bayesian” decision theory (in so far as Bayes is about taking pareto improvements).
Another part of the idea (not fully explained in Scott’s post I referenced earlier) is that nonexploited bargaining (AKA bargaining away from the pareto fronteir AKA cooperating with agents with different notions of fairness) provides a model of why agents should not just take pareto improvements all the time, and may therefore be a seed of “non-Bayesian” decision theory (in so far as Bayes is about taking pareto improvements).