Models of Bounded Rationality: Empirically grounded economic reason

Framsida
MIT Press, 1997 - 457 sidor
Annotation Throughout Herbert Simon's wide-ranging career-in public administration, business administration, economics, cognitive psychology, philosophy, artificial intelligence, and computer science-his central aim has been to explain the nature of the thought processes that people use in making decisions.

The third volume of Simon's collected papers continues this theme, bringing together work on this and other economics-related topics that have occupied his attention in the 1980s and 1990s: how to represent causal ordering formally in dynamic systems, the implications for society of new electronic information systems, employee and managerial motivation in the business firm (specifically the implications for economics of the propensity of human beings to identify with the goals of organizations), and the state of economics itself.

Offering alternative models based on such concepts as satisficing (acceptance of viable choices that may not be the undiscoverable optimum) and bounded rationality (the limited extent to which rational calculation can direct human behavior), Simon shows concretely why more empirical research based on experiments and direct observation, rather than just statistical analysis of economic aggregates, is needed.

The twenty-seven articles, in five sections, each with an introduction by the author, examine the modeling of economic systems, technological change: information technology, motivation and the theory of the firm, and behavioral economics and bounded rationality.
 

Innehåll

I
1
II
9
III
13
IV
43
V
105
VI
115
VII
129
VIII
137
XVII
257
XVIII
267
XIX
275
XX
277
XXI
291
XXII
295
XXIII
319
XXIV
337

IX
145
X
163
XI
173
XII
183
XIII
197
XIV
205
XV
217
XVI
241
XXV
343
XXVI
367
XXVII
387
XXVIII
401
XXIX
421
XXX
433
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