Sen’s critique of the homo economicus conception of choice asserts that agents who ‘dis-place ’ their goals, and instead choose on the basis of others’, are not therefore irrational. I first defend Sen against the objection that violations of “self-goal choice ” undermine coherent deliberation. My critique of Sen then introduces the notion of ‘negative goals’ and shows that the process of adopting others ’ aims remains constrained by those ‘goals’ that determine the spectrum of actions that an agent considers permissible. Only on rare occasions are we pushed to violate even these negative goals that play a central role for our identities
The paper deals with evaluating the adequacy of the assumption that in economic transactions people ...
The selfish goal metaphor is interesting and intriguing. It accounts for the idiosyncrasies and inco...
These very brief remarks are a fledgling first attempt to bring together a class of philosophical de...
In his critique of rational choice theory, Amartya Sen claims that committed agents do not (or not e...
Why does Sen maintain that people are capable of putting their own goals offline and deliberating an...
International audienceSen's seminal, negative theorem about minimal liberalism has had a profound ef...
Summary. Sen’s seminal, negative theorem about minimal liberalism has had a profound effect on econo...
Summary. Sen’s seminal, negative theorem about minimal liberalism has had a pro-found effect on econ...
In his critique of a self-interest understanding of rationality Amartya Sen appeals to notions like ...
Critics of economics often highlight two related issues: the empirical falsity of the ‘homo economic...
In this Comment, I examine Christoph Hanisch’s recent contribution to this journal. In commenting on...
No abstractSen clarifies, almost from the beginning, that his primary concern is not with the relati...
For about 2,500 years, the term rationality has been used in the Western world to describe the appli...
Mainstream game theory explains cooperation as the outcome of the interaction of agents who permanen...
For each of the many goals of an agent it is true that the agent wants its realization. Given furthe...
The paper deals with evaluating the adequacy of the assumption that in economic transactions people ...
The selfish goal metaphor is interesting and intriguing. It accounts for the idiosyncrasies and inco...
These very brief remarks are a fledgling first attempt to bring together a class of philosophical de...
In his critique of rational choice theory, Amartya Sen claims that committed agents do not (or not e...
Why does Sen maintain that people are capable of putting their own goals offline and deliberating an...
International audienceSen's seminal, negative theorem about minimal liberalism has had a profound ef...
Summary. Sen’s seminal, negative theorem about minimal liberalism has had a profound effect on econo...
Summary. Sen’s seminal, negative theorem about minimal liberalism has had a pro-found effect on econ...
In his critique of a self-interest understanding of rationality Amartya Sen appeals to notions like ...
Critics of economics often highlight two related issues: the empirical falsity of the ‘homo economic...
In this Comment, I examine Christoph Hanisch’s recent contribution to this journal. In commenting on...
No abstractSen clarifies, almost from the beginning, that his primary concern is not with the relati...
For about 2,500 years, the term rationality has been used in the Western world to describe the appli...
Mainstream game theory explains cooperation as the outcome of the interaction of agents who permanen...
For each of the many goals of an agent it is true that the agent wants its realization. Given furthe...
The paper deals with evaluating the adequacy of the assumption that in economic transactions people ...
The selfish goal metaphor is interesting and intriguing. It accounts for the idiosyncrasies and inco...
These very brief remarks are a fledgling first attempt to bring together a class of philosophical de...