Rationality, External Norms and the Epistemic Value of Menus


Autoria(s): Bossert, Walter; Suzumura, Kotaro
Data(s)

24/09/2008

24/09/2008

01/06/2008

Resumo

Ever since Sen’s (1993; 1997) criticism on the notion of internal consistency or menu independence of choice, there exists a widespread perception that the standard revealed preference approach to the theory of rational choice has difficulties in coping with the existence of external norms, or the information a menu of choice might convey to a decision-maker, viz., the epistemic value of a menu. This paper provides a brief survey of possible responses to these criticisms of traditional rational choice theory. It is shown that a novel concept of norm-conditional rationalizability can neatly accommodate external norms within the standard framework of rationalizability theory. Furthermore, we illustrate that there are several ways of incorporating considerations regarding the epistemic value of opportunity sets into a generalized model of rational choice theory.

Formato

155976 bytes

application/pdf

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/2577

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Université de Montréal - Département de sciences économiques

Relação

Cahier de recherche #2008-09

Palavras-Chave #D11 #D71
Tipo

Article