carnes@gargoyle.UUCP (Richard Carnes) (10/12/85)
The Pareto criterion was devised by Vilfredo Pareto to get around the problem of the interpersonal comparison of utilities (satisfactions) that was faced by classical Bentham-Mill utilitarianism. If you satisfy X at the expense of Y, is it meaningful to say that the increase in X's utility is greater than the decrease in Y's? The Pareto criterion provides a way of choosing among social outcomes without having to make such comparisons. Let there be a set of possible social states {A,B,...,Z} (e.g., income distributions). Each individual in the society is assumed to have a preference ordering of these states. A social state A is *Pareto-optimal* just in case there is no other state in the given set which is unanimously preferred to A. Example: Assume a two-person society composed of individuals X and Y, and assume that each ranks social states solely according to how much income he receives. Let the possible income distributions be the following: X Y A $0 $0 B $1000 $2000 C $2000 $4000 In this case, C is Pareto-optimal, and A and B are not. Neither A nor B is unanimously preferred to C. If we add another state D to the set D $3000 $3000 then both C and D are Pareto-optimal, and A and B are not. Now if we consider a new set of income distributions X Y A_k $k $(1,000,000 - k) where k ranges over the integers from 0 to 1,000,000, then *all* the the income distributions in the set are Pareto-optimal. Amartya Sen has shown in essence that Libertaria cannot make collectively rational social choices without violating either the Pareto principle or libertarian principles from time to time. If there is great popular demand I will post his example to the net. -- Richard Carnes, ihnp4!gargoyle!carnes
carnes@gargoyle.UUCP (Richard Carnes) (10/19/85)
I made a careless typo in the article about who reads *Lady Chatterly's Lover*. Do the following string replace: Old string: Mr. C New string: Mr. B There are only two persons, A and B, in this hypothetical Libertaria. Now, the book is sitting on the table between Messrs. A and B. Can you help them decide who, if anyone, should read D. H. Lawrence's book? -- Richard Carnes, ihnp4!gargoyle!carnes