Rational Choice Model Flashcards

1
Q

Is the rational choice model found in both realism and liberalism?

A

Common to both realism and liberalism

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2
Q

What does rational choice place great esteem in?

A

The open-mindedness + adaptability of FP decision makers

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3
Q

What is rational choice?

A
  • Orderly + logical approach to decision making

- That people should choose to use

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4
Q

How does rational choice work?

A

Preferences are ranked: If I prefer A to B, and B to C, then I prefer A to C

So decision makers can resolve conflicts by measuring along single attribute - subjective utility - and trading off to find best outcome

So complex measurements are made simple

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5
Q

Does rational choice mirror real life?

A
  • FP decision makers rarely meet these standards

- Thus models don’t mirror real life well at all

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6
Q

What was the Cognitive Revolution?

A
  • 40 years ago, psychologists began a cognitive revolution

- Found that people are predictably irrational

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7
Q

What are the 4 key reasons for people being predictably irrational?

A
  • Analogical reasoning
  • People prefer consistency
  • Cognitive biases
  • FP makers not neutral about risk
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8
Q

Why do decision makers tend to use analogical reasoning?

A
  • Decision makers need to order the world to make it less complex
  • Do so through analogical reasoning: looking to the past to learn about the future
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9
Q

Give an example of people using analogical reasoning

A
  • During Greek financial crisis
  • Calls from German officials calling for austerity were labelled as Nazi behaviour
  • Fitting German demands into an existing frame
  • Gave Greeks who opposed terms of bailout a ready rebuttal
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10
Q

What is the consequence of people preferring consistency?

A
  • People strongly prefer consistency + are made uncomfortable by dissonant information
  • So they consequently deny / discount information in order to preserve beliefs
  • Indeed exposure to contradictory information frequently results in strengthening of their beliefs
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11
Q

What is the result of cognitive biases?

A
  • Lead to serious errors in attribution
  • Can impair judgement
  • Confound policymaking
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12
Q

Why are FP makers not neutral about risk?

A
  • Because loss is more painful than comparable gain is pleasant
  • Thus people prefer an immediate small gain to taking a chance on a large long-term reward
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13
Q

Why is a mistake to consider rational choice models as empirically valid in foreign policy analysis?

A

These factors are so pervasive it is a mistake to consider rational choice models as empirically valid in FP analysis

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