SHOWDOWN: Are humans rational, self-interested economic actors? (10 min clip)

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It’s time for a SHOWDOWN! Katy and Chris engage in a five-minute debate (& then some) over whether human beings are truly rational—are all economic decisions made in self-interest? Or are we creatures of passion, blinded by bias, emotion, and base instinct? Join us as we explore whether the economy is the result of a series of comprehensible economic steps—or a mishmash of irrational acting out.

Watch the full episode here: Gender Bias or Biological Differences? What’s Really Going On With Women in the Workplace


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The Multiversity Project is a podcast for higher dimensional education. Join your hosts Arielle, Chris, Kurt, and Katy as we explore philosophy and the multiverse, and uncover the strangeness within.

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If you look up "rational" in the dictionary you will find it is synonymous with "logical".

All human actions, and in-fact all actions by all animate and inanimate objects are logical.

We commonly refer to this phenomenon as "cause and effect".

Some events lead to other events. This is uncontroversial.

Human actions are natural and logical consequences of mundane factors.

The example of eating candy while on a diet is merely an example of cognitive dissonance, which is a symptom of poor self-knowledge. A person's inability to predict their own actions does not make their actions "irrational", it simply makes them incoherent (lacking unity).

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