Preference purification and the inner rational agent:A critique of the conventional wisdom of behavioural welfare economics

Author: Bacharach M., Bacharach M., Berg N., Gerardo Infante, Guilhem Lecouteux, Hansen P. G., Hausman D., Kahneman D., Kahneman D., Plott C., Robert Sugden, Savage L.
Publisher: Informa UK Limited

ABOUT BOOK

Neoclassical economics assumes that individuals have stable and context-independent preferences, and uses preference-satisfaction as a normative criterion. By calling this assumption into question, behavioural findings cause fundamental problems for normative economics. A common response to these problems is to treat deviations from conventional rational-choice theory as mistakes, and to try to reconstruct the preferences that individuals would have acted on, had they reasoned correctly. We argue that this preference purification approach implicitly uses a dualistic model of the human being, in which an inner rational agent is trapped in an outer psychological shell. This model is psychologically and philosophically problematic

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