Rational Choice Theory

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Census
collective action
critique of rational choice models
Cultural Emergent Properties
decision theory
economicus
emergent properties
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eq_society-politics
extended
Extended Utility Function
Follow
Forceful Destruction
function
homo
Homo Sociologicus
individualism
instrumental
Instrumentally Rational
methodological
models
Overburdening
Parental Ballot
preference formation
Rational Choice Models
Rational Choice Theory
Rational Pursuit
rationality
RCT Methodology
RM Perspective
social norms analysis
sociological methodology
Somatic Marker
UK High
UK High Educational Institution
Underclass Individuals
USA
utility
Vice Versa
Violated
Wertrational Action
Word Of Mouth
Young Man
Zey 1992b

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415242721
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Dec 2000
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Rational Choice Theory is flourishing in sociology and is increasingly influential in other disciplines. Contributors to this volume are convinced that it provides an inadequate conceptualization of all aspects of decision making: of the individuals who make the decisions, of the process by which decisions get made and of the context within which decisions get made.
The ciritique focuses on the four assumptions which are the bedrock of rational choice:
rationality: the theory's definition of rationality is incomplete, and cannot satisfactorily incorporate norms and emotions
individualism: rational choice is based upon atomistic, individual decision makers and cannot account for decisions made by ;couples', 'groups' or other forms of collective action
process: the assumption of fixed, well-ordered preferences and 'perfect information' makes the theory inadequate for situations of change and uncertainty
aggregation: as methodological individualists, rational choice theorists can only view structure and culture as aggregates and cannot incorporate structural or cultural influences as emergent properties which have an effect upon decision making.
The critique is grounded in discussion of a wide range of social issues, including race, marriage, health and education.