DocumentCode
1474461
Title
Industry application of behavioral science
Author
Chamberlain, Thomas E.
Author_Institution
843 West 24th St., San Pedro, CA, USA
Volume
14
Issue
2
fYear
1999
fDate
2/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
7
Lastpage
10
Abstract
One of the more significant errors in the history of science occurred during the “marginal revolution” in economics near the end of the nineteenth century. Rather than explicitly recognize in basic theory that the happiness we seek to maximize in life originates within oneself, the early theorists formulated their equations as though human satisfaction resided in external things-as in so much utility (economist´s term for satisfaction) per pound of sugar. Over the past 125 years, economists have developed mainstream mathematical economics on this incorrect basis resulting in the ill-founded neoclassical Equilibrium Theory. Because of this error economic theory is fundamentally timeless. The present theory, in its canonical form, corrects the early marginalist´s error by identifying utility (time-integrated pleasure) exclusively with the stream-of-consciousness attending (expected) mental and physical activity. Time is now explicit in basic theory, thereby allowing, for the first time, the substantive computer-modeling of time-dependent, small- and large-scale economic systems. Furthermore, this new approach is methodologically compatible with mainstream sociology and institutional economics, allowing increased interdisciplinary cooperation that may influence policy and thereby affect industry and markets. And safety engineering stands to benefit from the accommodation of neuropsychology in understanding human error in the supervision and control of technology
Keywords
behavioural sciences; economics; engineering; history; behavioral science; canonical form; control; economics; errors; history of science; human error; institutional economics; mainstream sociology; mathematical economics; neoclassical Equilibrium Theory; supervision; Behavioral science; Computer errors; Equations; Error correction; History; Humans; Industry applications; Large-scale systems; Sociology; Sugar industry;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Aerospace and Electronic Systems Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0885-8985
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/62.746734
Filename
746734
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