Dualities in behavioural economics and neuroeconomics: a critical assessment in the light of the mechanistic approach in the philosophy of the brain sciences

Louvain-La-Neuve

13 décembre 2017

14h-16h

Louvain-la-Neuve

Salle Jean Ladrière - Collège Mercier - Place cardinal Mercier, 14

Prochaine séance de l'Arc par Carsten Herrmann-Pillath.

Building on an overview of various kinds of dual systems / process theories in psychology and economics, the paper proceeds with a methodological assessment in terms of the mechanistic or constitutive explanations framework that has gained prominence in philosophy of science recently, especially in the context of the neurosciences. I conclude that the existing dualist theories fail to meet the standards of proper causal explanations as established in this research. I suggest an alternative view, a dual functions view based on Marr’s celebrated methodology of computational neuroscience, and show that recent results in psychological and neuroscience research on dualities undermine the case for a simple categorization of processes in terms of properties such as relative speed and computational load, and point to alternative models available in the literature that highlight the role of higher-order levels of cognitive organisation in selecting specific mechanisms of choice and behaviour. In conclusion, I recommend a competing mechanisms framework along the lines of Edelman’s Neural Darwinism.