Description

Book Synopsis

The book explores rationality and normativity through a picoeconomic model of dynamic preference reversals and Ainslieâs personal rule approach. Focusing on negotiations between time-defined selves, it addresses key philosophical issues related to self-control and decision-making over time.

It primarily addresses a challenge to Ainslieâs approach: how to justify the bundling relation behind personal rules. Bundling links a series of similar choices, each of which predicts the direction of all subsequent ones. The book offers a thorough defense of bundling, examining it from various perspectives. The discussion engages with important contemporary thinkers in the fields of rationality, morality and personal identity, including Elster, McClennen, Gauthier, Bratman, Mele, Nozick, Davidson and others. A central feature of this study is the negligible aspects of normativity, such as cognitive bootstrapping. This involves making normative leaps to beliefs that connect consequential concerns with long-term reality checks.

This book will appeal to researchers and students of rational choice theory, philosophy of action, philosophical psychology and philosophy of economics.

Motivation Deliberation and Rationality for Dynamic Choice

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    £137.75

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    RRP £145.00 – you save £7.25 (5%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 27 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Yujian Zheng

    15 in stock


      View other formats and editions of Motivation Deliberation and Rationality for Dynamic Choice by Yujian Zheng

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 15/05/2026
      ISBN13: 9781041155843, 978-1041155843
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The book explores rationality and normativity through a picoeconomic model of dynamic preference reversals and Ainslieâs personal rule approach. Focusing on negotiations between time-defined selves, it addresses key philosophical issues related to self-control and decision-making over time.

      It primarily addresses a challenge to Ainslieâs approach: how to justify the bundling relation behind personal rules. Bundling links a series of similar choices, each of which predicts the direction of all subsequent ones. The book offers a thorough defense of bundling, examining it from various perspectives. The discussion engages with important contemporary thinkers in the fields of rationality, morality and personal identity, including Elster, McClennen, Gauthier, Bratman, Mele, Nozick, Davidson and others. A central feature of this study is the negligible aspects of normativity, such as cognitive bootstrapping. This involves making normative leaps to beliefs that connect consequential concerns with long-term reality checks.

      This book will appeal to researchers and students of rational choice theory, philosophy of action, philosophical psychology and philosophy of economics.

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