From Bounded Rationality to Behavioral Economics: Comment on Amitai Etzioni Statement on Behavioral Economics, SASE, July, 2009

Amitai Etzioni’s short statement opens a very wide range of issues that I think cannot be adequately addressed in a panel of this kind. But it seems to me that the main question posed in the context of the Annual Meetings of SASE is that of how we should understand socio-economics as an intellectual...

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Main Author: Piore, Michael J.
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Economics
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: Oxford University Press 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/61958
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7717-6897
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author Piore, Michael J.
author2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Economics
author_facet Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Economics
Piore, Michael J.
author_sort Piore, Michael J.
collection MIT
description Amitai Etzioni’s short statement opens a very wide range of issues that I think cannot be adequately addressed in a panel of this kind. But it seems to me that the main question posed in the context of the Annual Meetings of SASE is that of how we should understand socio-economics as an intellectual endeavor and where we should look for help and support. For me, speaking here as an economist, what is interesting about the endeavor is that it represents an attempt to temper the almost exclusive emphasis in the discipline of economics upon the individual – an emphasis which is moreover both analytical and normative – with a recognition of and concern for the role of the society in which the individual is embedded. From this point of view, I think the emphasis on Herbert Simon’s notion of bounded rationality is misdirected. The issues once addressed in economics under this heading have since been reinterpreted, partly in response to the kinds of criticisms which Etzioni makes in his statement. They are now being explored in two research programs.
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spelling mit-1721.1/619582022-09-30T18:41:13Z From Bounded Rationality to Behavioral Economics: Comment on Amitai Etzioni Statement on Behavioral Economics, SASE, July, 2009 Piore, Michael J. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Economics Piore, Michael J. Piore, Michael J. Amitai Etzioni’s short statement opens a very wide range of issues that I think cannot be adequately addressed in a panel of this kind. But it seems to me that the main question posed in the context of the Annual Meetings of SASE is that of how we should understand socio-economics as an intellectual endeavor and where we should look for help and support. For me, speaking here as an economist, what is interesting about the endeavor is that it represents an attempt to temper the almost exclusive emphasis in the discipline of economics upon the individual – an emphasis which is moreover both analytical and normative – with a recognition of and concern for the role of the society in which the individual is embedded. From this point of view, I think the emphasis on Herbert Simon’s notion of bounded rationality is misdirected. The issues once addressed in economics under this heading have since been reinterpreted, partly in response to the kinds of criticisms which Etzioni makes in his statement. They are now being explored in two research programs. 2011-03-25T14:26:50Z 2011-03-25T14:26:50Z 2010-01 Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle 1475-147X 1475-1461 http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/61958 Piore, Michael J. "From Bounded Rationality to Behavioral Economics: Comment on Amitai Etzioni Statement on Behavioral Economics, SASE, July, 2009" https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7717-6897 en_US http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ser/mwq002 Socio-Economic Review Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ application/pdf Oxford University Press MIT web domain
spellingShingle Piore, Michael J.
From Bounded Rationality to Behavioral Economics: Comment on Amitai Etzioni Statement on Behavioral Economics, SASE, July, 2009
title From Bounded Rationality to Behavioral Economics: Comment on Amitai Etzioni Statement on Behavioral Economics, SASE, July, 2009
title_full From Bounded Rationality to Behavioral Economics: Comment on Amitai Etzioni Statement on Behavioral Economics, SASE, July, 2009
title_fullStr From Bounded Rationality to Behavioral Economics: Comment on Amitai Etzioni Statement on Behavioral Economics, SASE, July, 2009
title_full_unstemmed From Bounded Rationality to Behavioral Economics: Comment on Amitai Etzioni Statement on Behavioral Economics, SASE, July, 2009
title_short From Bounded Rationality to Behavioral Economics: Comment on Amitai Etzioni Statement on Behavioral Economics, SASE, July, 2009
title_sort from bounded rationality to behavioral economics comment on amitai etzioni statement on behavioral economics sase july 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/61958
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7717-6897
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