Politická ekonomie 2007, 55(3) | DOI: 10.18267/j.polek.606
Transitivity and dominance: normative and empirical position of two cornerstones of economic models of decision-making
Transitivity and dominance are key concepts built deep into the fundaments of most economic models of decision-making. One of the arguments in favour of using the two concepts is that they are normative, i.e., symptomatic of perfect, rational decision-making. This paper describes several specific axioms stemming from these concepts and appearing in axiomatic models of decision-making, gives possible arguments speaking for or against the normativeness of a given concept and adds examples of empirically observed violations of the concept by human decision-making. In the conclusion, it offers an assessment of whether the use of transitivity and dominance in economic models of decision-making is justified or not.
Keywords: transitivity, stochastic transitivity, dominance, stochastic dominance, axioms, lexicographic semiorder, Condorcet paradox
JEL classification: D11, D12, D81
Zveřejněno: 1. červen 2007 Zobrazit citaci
Tento článek je publikován v režimu tzv. otevřeného přístupu k vědeckým informacím (Open Access), který je distribuován pod licencí Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY NC ND 4.0), která umožňuje nekomerční distribuci, reprodukci a změny, pokud je původní dílo řádně ocitováno. Není povolena distribuce, reprodukce nebo změna, která není v souladu s podmínkami této licence.
