It doesn't matter, base choose always requires a basic yes/no dichotomy....unless you know so much you can't see otherwise.FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Fri Feb 01, 2019 10:56 pmWhich book? The one by Seymour Lessans in which the author apparently doesn't know what rational choice theory is. Or one of the many economics books such as Richard Posner's Economic Analysis of Law that use it? I ask, because the latter certainly does not posit any "preconfigured dualism determining choice" and the former does not even contain the phrase "rational choice theory". So when you wrote "Actually rational choice theory necessitates a preconfigured dualism determining choice" you were bullshitting either way.Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 01, 2019 10:42 pmYou rarely know what is going on. The book observes that human decision making is a deterministic framework, even the basic choice paradigm requires a base dualism (2) that is not subject to choice.FlashDangerpants wrote: ↑Fri Feb 01, 2019 10:38 pm
No idea what you are on about. I was referencing a famous economic theory that doesn't even pretend to describe the real world, let alone discuss determinism in any way. It's there for the purpose of gross simplification, which is what the book under discussion also does, albeit without acknowledgment because the author lacks that sort of self awareness. RCT briefly explains human decision making, assuming in the process that all decisions are oriented towards a specific goal or desire, which is sort of obviously not true.
You are far too desperate to impress. Stop being pretentious. You belong here https://www.reddit.com/r/iamverysmart/
Save the pretentious remarks, a year ago you wanted to stroke my dick, a "cow" is pretentious to a wannabe intellectual trash like you.
Please continue with your explanation of choice "without" a basic yes/no dualism premised in a deterministic quantification.