Game theory has brought into economics an uncertainty principle similar
to the one brought into physics by the quantum theory. Professor Barch's
main purpose in this book is to show how one can construct realistic
economic theories by taking uncertainty into account instead of
dismissing it. He brings together a number of recent developments in
different fields of economics and other social sciences in which
uncertainty and chance play a central role and shows that they really
constitute an entity. These developments include the revisions of
utility, the introduction of game theory as a basic tool, and the view
of the foundations of probability theory adopted by modern Bayesian
statisticians.
Originally published in 1968.
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