However, sociologists have questioned the empirical foundations of the modeling assumptions.
Gary Becker’s big mistake
Lars P. Syll | Professor, Malmo University
Rational choice theory is a theoretical framework commonly used in various social sciences including economics, political sciences, and sociology. While in economics, rational choice theory has become the dominant paradigm, this has not been the case in sociology. On the contrary, rational choice theory has been widely criticized for its unrealistic assumptions, lack of empirical testing, and limited empirical validity (cf Green and Shapiro, 1994; Goldthorpe, 2000). While some of these criticisms are related to misconceptions of the interpretation of rational choice theory, others have been seriously taken up by researchers in the field. This has led to more research in which rational choice theory construction is combined with a variety of empirical tests. — Rational Choice Theory in SociologyLars P. Syll’s Blog
Gary Becker’s big mistake
Lars P. Syll | Professor, Malmo University
It’s a religion, a belief system. Once it’s grown large enough a few people will benefit from it massively, and the plebs will believe in whatever the self appointed priests/gurus say is the truth since wading through all false assumptions is nothing plebs have time to do.
ReplyDeleteHomo rationale went extinct eons ago, and was replaced by homo hystericus.
ReplyDeleteS,
ReplyDeleteJust picking up your comment here... youre back up to a 3.1