There is no problem of interpersonal comparisons
- 👤 Speaker: Erik Angner (George Mason University)
- 📅 Date & Time: Wednesday 13 May 2015, 13:00 - 14:30
- 📍 Venue: Seminar Room 2, Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Abstract
The proposition that interpersonal comparisons of utility are impossible has been part and parcel of mainstream economics for almost a century. These days, the proposition is invoked inter alia in arguments against happiness-based measures of well-being, which average happiness scores across populations in an effort to represent social welfare. In this talk, I will argue that interpersonal comparisons of utility are in fact implicit in virtually all traditional economic social welfare measures as well; if such comparisons are problematic, then, the problem is not unique to happiness-based measures. Fortunately, however, I will argue but that the proposition is a piece of zombie methodology: a methodological prescription that should have been dead and buried a long time ago. Social welfare measures have many problems, but interpersonal comparisons isn’t one.
Series This talk is part of the CamPoS (Cambridge Philosophy of Science) seminar series.
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Erik Angner (George Mason University)
Wednesday 13 May 2015, 13:00-14:30