Spot on, Richard. Very illustrative example.
kenberg, on Feb 3 2010, 02:43 PM, said:
I only have to look at my own behavior to be skeptical of theories based on rationality.
If you define the word "rational" in a sufficiently general way it becomes almost a tautology that we are all rational.
Say that I have a pile a donuts for lunch today. That sounds irrational given that I have low blood count, ought to be lose some weight, and since I didn't bring my toothbrush I shouldn't be eating sugary things at work. Besides, I could have found alternative food on the campus which is not just healthier but also cheaper and better tasting.
But obviously all that information wasn't available to me (I must temporarily have slipped the info that donuts don't contain much iron, for example) since otherwise I would have chosen some different food, wouldn't I? Maybe the info was available but it was a temporary lack of information processing skills. Maybe I was stressed and couldn't think so clearly. Well, information processing capabilities is just another scarce resource. Just like a house may collapse due to lack of good clay it may also collapse because of lack of architect's brain cells. Or lack of project developer's brain cells.
I think economics could be an interesting science if it were based on assumptions that could be tested. What occurred to me after I had been doing mathematical economics for a year was that the assumptions have no interpretation in terms of predicted observations. So I thought, if those theories haven't any practical use, why not study pure mathematics instead, that may be equally remote from the real world but at least I would get to do with some elegant theories. Anyway, I was too stupid for pure math so I decided to do neither, and specialize in engineering math instead.
To be fair, there are lots of good books that deal with economics at an academic level, making it intellectually satisfying and applicable at the same time. But this "physics envy" trend to axiomatize fields that just aren't even remotely ripe for axiomatizing ("economic man", "efficient market hypothesis" and similar nonsense), don't waste time on it.
The world would be such a happy place, if only everyone played Acol :) --- TramTicket