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2010 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

9. Economic Defenses for Rational Behavior in Economics

Author : Prof. Richard B. McKenzie

Published in: Predictably Rational?

Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg

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Abstract

The various historical and disciplinary analyses of rational behavior in this book lead inextricably to an overarching conclusion: Perfect rational behavior, the type widely presumed in neoclassical economics – a decision making process in which people flawlessly (with impeccable consistency and transitivity) make choices among known alternatives with known resources at their disposable – is not, and cannot be, descriptive of the full scope of the human predicament. Frank Knight’s observations regarding “scientific economics” is key to understanding the limits of rational behavior for people and the limits of economics as a means of understanding human behavior: “The first question in regard to scientific economics is the question of how far life is rational, how far its problems reduce to the form of using given means to achieve given ends.....[L]ife is at bottom an exploration in the field of values, an attempt to discover values, rather than on the knowledge of them to produce and enjoy them to the greatest possible extent” (1935, p.  105). Nevertheless, there can be a rationality of a sort – and an economics of a sort – so far as wants are determined and to the extent that people can and do contemplate the relative merits of alternative courses of production and consumption. Behavioral psychologists and economists have more recently documented many imperfections in human rationality, and its derivatives, decision making, and behaviors (see Chap. 6), but neoclassical economists should neither consider such findings unexpected nor deny them. Oddly, as will be seen in Chaps. 10 and 11, the behaviorals’ findings should even be welcomed as a reason d’être for the economics as a course of study and method for thinking and deducing insights about real-world human behavior.

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Footnotes
1
After all, Friedman’s book Free to Choose (1980) with his economist wife Rose Friedman is replete with discussions that relate to the pat quip there is no such thing as a free lunch, suggesting that the world abounds with choices that require optimization of outcomes, not perfect outcomes.
 
2
A premise of perfect rationality does not require a perfect record of empirical confirmation. Predictions founded on as-if perfect rationality can achieve a greater frequency of confirmation under competitive pressures than less competitive pressures and can do better in making confirmable predictions than the next best alternative theory.
 
Literature
go back to reference Ariely D (2008) Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces that Shape Our Decisions. HarperCollins Publishers, New York Ariely D (2008) Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces that Shape Our Decisions. HarperCollins Publishers, New York
go back to reference Friedman M (1953) The methodology of positive economics. Essays in Positive Economics. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, pp 3–46 Friedman M (1953) The methodology of positive economics. Essays in Positive Economics. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, pp 3–46
go back to reference Keynes JN (1891) The Scope and Method of Political Economy. Macmillan & Co., London Keynes JN (1891) The Scope and Method of Political Economy. Macmillan & Co., London
go back to reference Rubin PH (1993) Managing Business Transactions. Free Press, New York Rubin PH (1993) Managing Business Transactions. Free Press, New York
Metadata
Title
Economic Defenses for Rational Behavior in Economics
Author
Prof. Richard B. McKenzie
Copyright Year
2010
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-01586-1_9

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