Toward a transactional theory of decision making: creative rationality as functional coordination in context
Mousavi, Shabnam (2003). "Toward a Transactional Theory of Decision Makig: Creative Rationality as Functional Coordination in Context," with Jim Garrison, Journal of Economic Methodology, 10 (2), 131-56.
This paper poses a Deweyan challenge to both the neoclassical framework
of rational choice and models of bounded rationality and deliberation,
especially the procedural theory of rationality advanced by Herbert
Simon. We demonstrate how modern theories on procedural or instrumental
rationality trace their origin to the tradition of British empiricism,
especially the philosophy of David Hume. Most theories of action such
as Simon's assume actors may control their bodies 'at will.' For Dewey,
habits are will; we control them when we identify them and condition
them through reflective deliberation. To clarify our Deweyan critique,
we use empirical research on consumer's use of mathematical calculation
in supermarkets, by Jean Lave, which rejects calculative Turing machine
rationality. We argue that a theory that can deal with deliberation
regarding incommensurable values better explains economic behavior in
the everyday marketplace. Thus, economists would do better to
concentrate on social practices in specific contexts and the
neurophysiological basis of need and desire.