PKT
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
Re: Paul D. on this year's Nobel
>
>all of the above analysis, James, still requires the ERGODIC AXIOM (or the
>ordering axiom) and hence are logically incompatible with the concept of
>fundamental uncertainty.
My impression of this work -- and I'm sure no expert on it -- is that it is
concerned with how real-world human beings make choices in real-world
situations. In this respect it strikes me as interesting and useful. In some
respects it is subversive of neoclassical orthodoxy, since it calls into
question the axioms of choice upon which conventional demand functions rest.
I'm not sure how wedded these insights are to what Paul calls the "ergodic
axiom". The work suggests that the economist's conception of "rationality"
doesn't reflect how human beings actually make decisions. This in itself
hasn't got anything to do with ergodicity, as far as I can see. To the extent
that behavioral economists share an essentially neoclssical understanding of
market processes, their work no doubt contains trace elements of the kind of
reasoning to which Paul objects. But those elements seem to me to be
incidental to, and distinct from, the behavioral insights, which stand alone
(and which may or may not be sound in themselves).
Regards,
Gary
>
>Paul
>Paul Davidson
>Editor, Journal of Post Keynesian Economics
>503 SMC
>University of Tennessee
>Knoxville, Tn 379996-0550
>phone Number: (865) 974-4221
>fax number: (865) 974-1686
>http://econ.bus.utk.edu/davidsonextra/Davidson.html
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]