My theory doesn’t consider rational behavior impossible—it’s just exceptional. A typical day will contain one rationally optimized decision (if you’re really good; otherwise zero) and thousands of decisions made for you by your tendencies.
This relates to my earlier comment about ignoring the computational limits on rationality. It wouldn’t be rational to put a lot of effort into rationally optimizing every decision you make during the day. In my opinion any attempts to improve human rationality have to recognize that resource limitations and computational limits are an important constraint. Having an imperfect but reasonable heuristic for most decisions is a rational solution to the problem of making decisions given limited resources. It would be great to figure out how to do better given the constraints but theories that start from an assumption of unlimited resources are going to be of limited practical use.
my country was once drowned in blood by revolutionaries wishing to build a rational, atheistic, goal-directed society.
I can see how conflating communism with rationality would lead you to be distrustful of rationality. I personally think the greatest intellectual failure of communism was failing to recognize the importance of individual incentives and utility maximization or to acknowledge the gap between people’s stated intentions and their actual motivations which means in my view it was never rational. Hayek’s economic calculation problem criticism of socialism is an example of recognizing the importance of computational constraints when trying to improve decisions. I’d agree that there is a danger of people with a naive view of rationality and utility thinking that communism is a good idea though.
This relates to my earlier comment about ignoring the computational limits on rationality. It wouldn’t be rational to put a lot of effort into rationally optimizing every decision you make during the day. In my opinion any attempts to improve human rationality have to recognize that resource limitations and computational limits are an important constraint. Having an imperfect but reasonable heuristic for most decisions is a rational solution to the problem of making decisions given limited resources. It would be great to figure out how to do better given the constraints but theories that start from an assumption of unlimited resources are going to be of limited practical use.
I can see how conflating communism with rationality would lead you to be distrustful of rationality. I personally think the greatest intellectual failure of communism was failing to recognize the importance of individual incentives and utility maximization or to acknowledge the gap between people’s stated intentions and their actual motivations which means in my view it was never rational. Hayek’s economic calculation problem criticism of socialism is an example of recognizing the importance of computational constraints when trying to improve decisions. I’d agree that there is a danger of people with a naive view of rationality and utility thinking that communism is a good idea though.