Towards a Unity of the Human Behavioral Sciences

Despite their distinct objects of study, the human behavioral sciences all include models of individual human behavior. Unity in the behavioral sciences requires that there be a common underlying model of individual human behavior, specialized and enriched to meet the particular needs of each discip...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Herbert Gintis
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2006-04-01
Series:Papers
Subjects:
Online Access:https://papers.uab.cat/article/view/1771
_version_ 1818576434909675520
author Herbert Gintis
author_facet Herbert Gintis
author_sort Herbert Gintis
collection DOAJ
description Despite their distinct objects of study, the human behavioral sciences all include models of individual human behavior. Unity in the behavioral sciences requires that there be a common underlying model of individual human behavior, specialized and enriched to meet the particular needs of each discipline. Such unity does not exist, and cannot be easily attained, since the various disciplines have incompatible models and disparate research methodologies. Yet recent theoretical and empirical developments have created the conditions for unity in the behavioral sciences, incorporating core principles from all fields, and based upon theoretical tools (game theory and the rational actor model) and data gathering techniques (experimental games in laboratory and field) that transcend disciplinary boundaries. This paper sketches a set of principles aimed at fostering such a unity. They include: (a) evolutionary and behavioral game theory provides a transdisciplinary lexicon for communication and modelbuilding; (b) the rational actor model, rooted in biology but developed in economic theory, applies to all the human behavioral disciplines. This model treats actions as instrumental towards satisfying preferences. However, the content of preferences must be empirically determined. Moreover, the rational actor model is based on a notion of preference consistency that is not universally satisfied, so its range of applicability must also be empirically determined; (c) controlled experiments have been underutilized in most behavioral disciplines. Game theory and the rational actor model can be used as the basis for formulating, deploying, and analyzing data generated from controlled experiments with human subjects.
first_indexed 2024-12-16T06:13:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-c20e376aefb5428ebd53b19895100f66
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 0210-2862
2013-9004
language Catalan
last_indexed 2024-12-16T06:13:58Z
publishDate 2006-04-01
publisher Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
record_format Article
series Papers
spelling doaj.art-c20e376aefb5428ebd53b19895100f662022-12-21T22:41:20ZcatUniversitat Autònoma de BarcelonaPapers0210-28622013-90042006-04-018010.5565/rev/papers/v80n0.17711527Towards a Unity of the Human Behavioral SciencesHerbert GintisDespite their distinct objects of study, the human behavioral sciences all include models of individual human behavior. Unity in the behavioral sciences requires that there be a common underlying model of individual human behavior, specialized and enriched to meet the particular needs of each discipline. Such unity does not exist, and cannot be easily attained, since the various disciplines have incompatible models and disparate research methodologies. Yet recent theoretical and empirical developments have created the conditions for unity in the behavioral sciences, incorporating core principles from all fields, and based upon theoretical tools (game theory and the rational actor model) and data gathering techniques (experimental games in laboratory and field) that transcend disciplinary boundaries. This paper sketches a set of principles aimed at fostering such a unity. They include: (a) evolutionary and behavioral game theory provides a transdisciplinary lexicon for communication and modelbuilding; (b) the rational actor model, rooted in biology but developed in economic theory, applies to all the human behavioral disciplines. This model treats actions as instrumental towards satisfying preferences. However, the content of preferences must be empirically determined. Moreover, the rational actor model is based on a notion of preference consistency that is not universally satisfied, so its range of applicability must also be empirically determined; (c) controlled experiments have been underutilized in most behavioral disciplines. Game theory and the rational actor model can be used as the basis for formulating, deploying, and analyzing data generated from controlled experiments with human subjects.https://papers.uab.cat/article/view/1771behavioral sciencesgame theoryexperimental economicsrational actor model
spellingShingle Herbert Gintis
Towards a Unity of the Human Behavioral Sciences
Papers
behavioral sciences
game theory
experimental economics
rational actor model
title Towards a Unity of the Human Behavioral Sciences
title_full Towards a Unity of the Human Behavioral Sciences
title_fullStr Towards a Unity of the Human Behavioral Sciences
title_full_unstemmed Towards a Unity of the Human Behavioral Sciences
title_short Towards a Unity of the Human Behavioral Sciences
title_sort towards a unity of the human behavioral sciences
topic behavioral sciences
game theory
experimental economics
rational actor model
url https://papers.uab.cat/article/view/1771
work_keys_str_mv AT herbertgintis towardsaunityofthehumanbehavioralsciences