Explaining Social Behavior

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, Jul 30, 2015 - Philosophy - 505 pages
In this new edition of his critically acclaimed book, Jon Elster examines the nature of social behavior, proposing choice as the central concept of the social sciences. Extensively revised throughout, the book offers an overview of key explanatory mechanisms, drawing on many case studies and experiments to explore the nature of explanation in the social sciences; an analysis of the mental states - beliefs, desires, and emotions - that are precursors to action; a systematic comparison of rational-choice models of behavior with alternative accounts, and a review of mechanisms of social interaction ranging from strategic behavior to collective decision making. A wholly new chapter includes an exploration of classical moralists and Proust in charting mental mechanisms operating 'behind the back' of the agent, and a new conclusion points to the pitfalls and fallacies in current ways of doing social science, proposing guidelines for more modest and more robust procedures.

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Contents

The Mind
55
Action
187
Reinforcement and selection
205
Persons and situations
223
Rational choice
235
Rationality and behavior
255
Responding to irrationality
270
Implications for textual interpretation
283
Games and behavior
324
Trust
335
Social norms
347
Collective belief formation
365
Collective action
382
Collective decision making
399
Institutions and constitutions
429
is social science possible?
452

Interaction
295
Unintended consequences
297
Strategic interaction
308

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