Interaction Problems for Utility Maximizers
- 1 June 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Canadian Journal of Philosophy
- Vol. 4 (4) , 677-688
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00455091.1975.10716085
Abstract
This essay is arranged in three sections. In the first I consider interaction problems that can frustrate maximizers. My object here is to add to the kind of case discussed by Gauthier, another in which maximizers would not do well. In the next section I set out conditions under which ‘straight’ or ordinary maximizers could avoid their problems as surely and as easily as could Gauthier's ‘constrained’ maximizers. And in the last section I comment on the relative merits of straight and ‘constrained’ maximization. Attention here is paid first to the suggestion that straight maximizers in view of their problems would choose not to be straight maximizers, would indeed choose to be ‘constrained’ maximizers, and that this shows that there is something wrong with straight maximization. Rejecting this inference, I turn in conclusion to the idea that it follows from the ‘incompleteness’ of straight maximization, from the fact that it is not always possible, that there is something wrong with it. This inference too is rejected.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Impossibility of Rational EgoismThe Journal of Philosophy, 1974
- Risk, Ambiguity, and the Savage AxiomsThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1961