Behavioral Probability

Alex Stein
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Abstract

Throughout their long history, humans have worked hard to tame chance. They adapted to their uncertain physical and social environments by using the method of trial and error. This evolutionary process made humans reason about uncertain facts the way they do. Behavioral economists argue that humans’ natural selection of their prevalent mode of reasoning wasn’t wise. They censure this mode of reasoning for violating the canons of mathematical probability that a rational person must obey. This chapter challenges both parts of this ambitious claim. Based on the insights from probability theory and the philosophy of induction, I argue that a rational person need not apply mathematical probability in making decisions about individual causes and effects. Instead, she should be free to use common sense reasoning that generally aligns with causative probability. I also show that behavioral experiments uniformly miss their target when they ask reasoners to extract probability from information that combines causal evidence with statistical data. Because it is perfectly rational for a person focusing on a specific event to prefer causal evidence to general statistics, those experiments establish no deviations from rational reasoning. Those experiments are also flawed in that they do not separate the reasoners’ unreflective beliefs from rule-driven acceptances. The behavioral economists’ claim that people are probabilistically challenged consequently remains unproven.
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行为概率
在漫长的历史中,人类一直在努力驯服机遇。他们通过试错法来适应不确定的自然环境和社会环境。这一进化过程使人类以自己的方式对不确定的事实进行推理。行为经济学家认为,人类对其普遍推理模式的自然选择是不明智的。他们谴责这种推理模式违反了一个理性的人必须遵守的数学概率法则。本章挑战了这一雄心勃勃的主张的两个部分。基于概率论和归纳法哲学的见解,我认为一个理性的人不需要运用数学概率来决定个人的因果关系。相反,她应该可以自由地使用通常与因果概率一致的常识性推理。我还表明,当行为实验要求推理者从结合因果证据和统计数据的信息中提取概率时,行为实验总是偏离目标。因为对于一个专注于特定事件的人来说,比起一般的统计数据,更喜欢因果证据是完全理性的,所以这些实验没有偏离理性推理。这些实验也有缺陷,因为它们没有将推理者的非反思信念与规则驱动的接受区分开来。因此,行为经济学家关于人们受到概率挑战的说法仍未得到证实。
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