Bookbot

Predictably rational?

In Search of Defenses for Rational Behavior in Economics

Valoración del libro

3,4(31)Añadir reseña

Más información sobre el libro

Mainstream economists everywhere exhibit an "irrational passion for dispassionate rationality." Behavioral economists, and long-time critic of mainstream economics suggests that people in mainstrean economic models "can think like Albert Einstein, store as much memory as IBM’s Big Blue, and exercise the will power of Mahatma Gandhi," suggesting that such a view of real world modern homo sapiens is simply wrongheaded. Indeed, Thaler and other behavioral economists and psychology have documented a variety of ways in which real-world people fall far short of mainstream economists' idealized economic actor, perfectly rational homo economicus. Behavioral economist Daniel Ariely has concluded that real-world people not only exhibit an array of decision-making frailties and biases, they are "predictably irrational," a position now shared by so many behavioral economists, psychologists, sociologists, and evolutionary biologists that a defense of the core rationality premise of modedrn economics is demanded.

Compra de libros

Predictably rational?, Richard B McKenzie

Idioma
Publicado en
2010
Te avisaremos por correo electrónico en cuanto lo localicemos.

Métodos de pago

3,4
Bueno
31 Valoraciones

Nos falta tu reseña aquí