Quick Book Search  

  Site Search

Main Search Page Our Books / About Us Ordering Contact Information Quick Links Shopping Cart
University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press University of Michigan Press

Cover Image for Choice-Free Rationality
6 x 9. 248 pgs. 5 drawings. (1999)

Cloth
978-0-472-11054-4
$75.00S  Available
Add to Cart

Search this Book's Content

About the Book


Subjects
Economics--Economic Theory / Philosophy / Political Science--Political Methodology

Choice-Free Rationality
A Positive Theory of Political Behavior

Robert Grafstein



Offers an alternative to the definition of 'rationality' for rational choice theory


About the Book

Rational choice theory has become the basis for much of the recent work done in political science. Yet explanations of many political phenomena elude rational choice theorists. Robert Grafstein offers a modification to rational choice theory that extends its ability to explain social behavior.

Grafstein argues that, instead of basing the analysis on the assumption that an actor will maximise her expected utility or her utility given the probability that the event will happen, we should define rationality as the maximisation of expected utility conditional on the probability that her act will bring the event about. This definition of utility, based on the work of Richard Jeffrey, restores the consequences of an individual's act to rational choice analysis. For example, in making a decision to vote, a conditional expected utility maximiser will compare the likelihood of victory for her preferred candidate given her own participation with the likelihood of a victory given her abstention.

The author shows the theoretical implications of this new definition of rationality and then uses it to explain certain aspects of ethnic identity and mobilization, ideology, and altruism and intertemporal choice. He then explores the implications of this idea for policy analysis and econometrics. This book will provoke a debate about how work based in rational choice theories is done.

Robert Grafstein is Professor of Political Science, University of Georgia.


 
Site Map