Preface Part I General Introductions 1. Introduction: Rationality and Freedom 2. The Possibility of Social Choice Part II Rationality: Form and Substance 3. Internal Consistency of Choice 4. Maximization and the Act of Choice 5. Goals, Commitment, and Identity 6. Rationality and Uncertainty 7. Non-Binary Choice and Preference Part III Rationality and Social Choice 8. Rationality and Social Choice 9. Individual Preference as the Basis of Social Choice 10. Social Choice and Justice 11. Information and Invariance in Normative Choice Part IV Liberty and Social Choice 12. Liberty and Social Choice 13. Minimal Liberty 14. Rights: Formulation and Consequences Part V Perspectives and Policies 15. Positional Objectivity 16. On the Darwinian View of Progress 17. Markets and Freedoms 18. Environmental Evaluation and Social Choice 19. The Discipline of Cost-Benefit Analysis Part VI Freedom and Social Choice: The Arrow Lectures Introductory Remarks 20. Opportunities and Freedoms 21. Processes, Liberty and Rights 22. Freedom and the Evaluation of Opportunity Name Index Subject Index
Sen's mastery in the fields of social choice, the foundations of welfare economics, and, more broadly, distributive ethics and the measurement problems associated with these fields is unquestioned. -- Kenneth J. Arrow
Amartya Sen is Lamont University Professor at Harvard University.
Sen's mastery in the fields of social choice, the foundations of
welfare economics, and, more broadly, distributive ethics and the
measurement problems associated with these fields is
unquestioned.
*Kenneth J. Arrow*
Amartya Sen occupies a unique position among modern economists. He
is an outstanding economic theorist, a world authority on social
choice and welfare economics. He is a leading figure in development
economics, carrying out pathbreaking work on appraising the
effectiveness of investment in poor countries and, more recently,
on famine. At the same time, he takes a broad view of the subject
and has done much to widen the perspective of economists.
*New York Review of Books*
Sen brings a hard-edged intellect to regions of thought usually
regarded as slushy and amorphous...Anyone interested in the topics
of freedom, equality, or justice would profit from a close reading
of this book.
*American Political Science Review*
A work of striking intellectual ambition and unusual intellectual
patience, tensely engaged in many different struggles and on a wide
variety of levels. What it offers is not a set of simple and
readily portable conclusions, or a means for reconciling the reader
to a devastatingly imperfect historical world, but a sustained
effort to clarify where the main imperfections come from, and what
could, in principle, be done to alleviate them.
*Times Higher Education Supplement*
One of the most attractive qualities of Rationality and Freedom is
an extraordinary intellectual good nature. Whenever he can express
gratitude, Professor Sen does so; whenever he criticizes it is
gently--and save on very rare occasions it is only after he has
expressed his appreciation for the stimulus provided by the error
he uncovers. It would be a poor return for what he offers us here
to pretend that everything he writes is equally persuasive; for
even when he is unpersuasive he provides intellectual pleasures
that few writers can match.
*New York Review of Books*
Sen's arguments about social choice are important. The first
chapter of the book offers a straightforward and comprehensive
account of the social choice approach and this discussion is
extended in the Nobel Lecture that forms the second chapter of the
bookÂ
[I]t should be widely consulted by social development
scholars who need to understand rational choice liberalism and its
relevance to social development.
*Social Development Issues*
Sen's mastery in the fields of social choice, the foundations of
welfare economics, and, more broadly, distributive ethics and the
measurement problems associated with these fields is unquestioned.
-- Kenneth J. Arrow
Amartya Sen occupies a unique position among modern economists. He
is an outstanding economic theorist, a world authority on social
choice and welfare economics. He is a leading figure in development
economics, carrying out pathbreaking work on appraising the
effectiveness of investment in poor countries and, more recently,
on famine. At the same time, he takes a broad view of the subject
and has done much to widen the perspective of economists. -- A. B.
Atkinson * New York Review of Books *
Sen brings a hard-edged intellect to regions of thought usually
regarded as slushy and amorphous...Anyone interested in the topics
of freedom, equality, or justice would profit from a close reading
of this book. -- Richard J. Arneson * American Political Science
Review *
A work of striking intellectual ambition and unusual intellectual
patience, tensely engaged in many different struggles and on a wide
variety of levels. What it offers is not a set of simple and
readily portable conclusions, or a means for reconciling the reader
to a devastatingly imperfect historical world, but a sustained
effort to clarify where the main imperfections come from, and what
could, in principle, be done to alleviate them. -- John Dunn *
Times Higher Education Supplement *
One of the most attractive qualities of Rationality and
Freedom is an extraordinary intellectual good nature. Whenever
he can express gratitude, Professor Sen does so; whenever he
criticizes it is gently--and save on very rare occasions it is only
after he has expressed his appreciation for the stimulus provided
by the error he uncovers. It would be a poor return for what he
offers us here to pretend that everything he writes is equally
persuasive; for even when he is unpersuasive he provides
intellectual pleasures that few writers can match. -- Alan Ryan *
New York Review of Books *
Sen's arguments about social choice are important. The first
chapter of the book offers a straightforward and comprehensive
account of the social choice approach and this discussion is
extended in the Nobel Lecture that forms the second chapter of the
book [I]t should be widely consulted by social development scholars
who need to understand rational choice liberalism and its relevance
to social development. * Social Development Issues *
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