Alex Stein (Yeshiva University – Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law) has posted Are People Probabilistically Challenged? Book Review of Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman (Michigan Law Review, Vol. 111, 2013) on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
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Thinking, Fast and Slow
Despite this advancement, I posit that the “bounded probabilistic rationality” thesis — the key component of Kahneman’s theory — remains unproven. Specifically, I argue that Kahneman and his collaborators have used an incomplete and unstable set of criteria for evaluating individuals’ determinations of probability. These criteria do not account for the differences between individuals’ rule-free “beliefs” and rule-based “acceptances” and fail to recognize a distinct — and perfectly rational — mode of probabilistic reasoning, known as causative or Baconian. Kahneman’s normative criteria also tolerate the presence of unspecified causality and malleable reference classes in experimental settings. As a result, his and his collaborators’ experiments do not reveal anything about the rationality of participants’ decisions. Indeed, my analysis of three flagship experiments, carried out by Kahneman and his collaborators, vindicates the participants’ appraisals of probability as perfectly rational. Policymakers therefore ought to put on hold the behavioral economists’ recommendations that urge the government to step in and fix people’s probabilistic decisions.
