This unique book develops an operational approach to preference and
rationality as the author employs operators over binary relations to
capture the concept of rationality.
A preference is a basis of individual behavior and social judgment and
is mathematically regarded as a binary relation on the set of
alternatives. Traditionally, an individual/social preference is assumed
to satisfy completeness and transitivity. However, each of the two
conditions is often considered to be too demanding; and then, weaker
rationality conditions are introduced by researchers. This book argues
that the preference rationality conditions can be captured
mathematically by "operators," which are mappings from the set of
operators to itself. This operational approach nests traditional
concepts in individual/social decision theory and clarifies the
underlying formal structure of preference rationality.
The author also applies his approach to welfare economics. The core
problem of 'new welfare economics, ' developed by Kaldor, Hicks, and
Samuelson, is the rationality of social preference. In this book the
author translates the social criteria proposed by those three economists
into operational forms, which provide new insights into welfare
economics extending beyond 'new welfare economics.'