无差异曲线与序数主义革命

Indifference Curves and the Ordinalist Revolution

History of Political Economy · 2012
被引 28 · 同刊同年前 4%
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

探讨了序数主义革命中无差异曲线的地位,以瑟斯通的实验为起点,分析了经济学家对实验在消费者选择理论中作用的争论,揭示了方法论分歧。

Abstract

The development of ordinalism was fostered by the idea of dispensing with external psychological arguments in utility theory and building the whole theory of the consumer upon indifference curves (and maps). Yet the pioneers of ordinalism, Fisher and Pareto, did not make clear whether indifference curves should be considered as an observational, experimental, or purely theoretical construction (possibly based upon introspection). Indeed, the exact status of indifference curves for the theory of choice was not seriously debated before the 1930s and 1940s, in the United States. An experiment by the psychologist Louis Leon Thurstone was then the starting point for some clarifications about the role of experimental economics for the new theory of the consumer. The aim of this article is to throw light on the ins and outs of this issue of the ordinalist revolution. Thurstone’s experiment was the occasion for a debate on the status of indifference curves and more broadly on the role of experiments within the theory of choice. It would lead economists (such as Georgescu-Roegen, Wallis, Friedman, and Samuelson) to clarify the methodological foundations of the theory of choice and to express strong divergences about the usefulness of the theory.

序数主义革命无差异曲线实验经济学消费者选择理论