Models of Decision-Making
Classical decision theory evaluates entire worlds, specified so as to include everything a decision-maker cares about. Thus applying decision theory requires performing computations far beyond an ordinary decision-maker's ability. In this book Paul Weirich explains how individuals can simplify and streamline their choices. He shows how different 'parts' of options (intrinsic, temporal, spatiotemporal, causal) are separable, so that we can know what difference one part makes to the value of an option, regardless of what happens in the other parts. He suggests that the primary value of options is found in basic intrinsic attitudes towards outcomes: desires, aversions, or indifferences. And using these two facts he argues that we need only compare small parts of the options we face in order to make a rational decision. This important book will interest readers in decision theory, economics, and the behavioral sciences.
- Justifies methods of simplifying choices and explains why the process of decision-making may ignore most past events
- Distinguishes types of utility according to evaluative scope, explaining the relationship between common ways of evaluating decisions
- Divides the utility of a whole into the utility of its parts and philosophically grounds alternatives to value holism
Product details
February 2015Hardback
9781107077799
276 pages
236 × 160 × 22 mm
0.54kg
15 b/w illus. 7 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1. Separability
- 2. Expected utility
- 3. Intrinsic utility
- 4. Temporal utility
- 5. Spatiotemporal utility
- 6. Causal utility
- Conclusion.