How do ordinary people come to know or believe what they do? We need
an account of this process to help explain why people act as they do.
You might think I am acting irrationally--against my interest or my
purpose--until you realize that what you know and what I know differ
significantly. My actions, given my knowledge, might make eminently
good sense. Of course, this pushes our problem back one stage to
assess why someone knows or believes what they do. That is the focus
of this book. Russell Hardin supposes that people are not usually
going to act knowingly against their interests or other purposes. To
try to understand how they have come to their knowledge or beliefs is
therefore to be charitable in assessing their rationality. Hardin
insists on such a charitable stance in the effort to understand others
and their sometimes objectively perverse actions. Hardin presents an
essentially economic account of what an individual can come to know
and then applies this account to many areas of ordinary life:
political participation, religious beliefs, popular knowledge of
science, liberalism, culture, extremism, moral beliefs, and
institutional knowledge. All of these can be enlightened by the
supposition that people are attempting reasonable actions under the
severe constraints of acquiring better knowledge when they face
demands that far outstretch their possibilities.
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The Economics of Ordinary Knowledge
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781400830664
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Vendor
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
240
Forfatter