Why known unknowns may be better than knowns, and how that matters for the evolution of happiness
Abstract
Rayo and Becker (2007) model happiness as an imperfect measurement tool: It
provides a partial ordering of alternative courses of actions. In this note, decisionmakers
use their inability to rank two actions, to infer rankings of other pairs of
actions. It is demonstrated that coarser happiness information actually increases
the power of inference. As a result behavior is maximizing, not merely satisficing,
almost independent of how coarse the happiness information is. Moreover, to support
inference, evolution selects a happiness function with different properties than
the one maximizing direct sensory information.
Publisher
University of Gothenburg
Other description
JEL: B52; D91; I31
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2022-10Author
Stennek, Johan
Keywords
Indirect evolutionary approach
utility function
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
829
Language
eng