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  1. What I Really, Really Want: The Role, Nature, and Value of True Preferences in the Ethics of Nudging.Bart Engelen & Viktor Ivanković - forthcoming - Journal of Applied Philosophy.
    In this article, we discuss the role that ‘true preferences’ can and should play in discussions on the possibility and desirability of paternalist nudges. Critics have claimed that such preferences do not exist, cannot be known reliably by third parties, and cannot justify whether and how to nudge people. In this article, we argue that these objections undermine the extent to which philosophers and laypeople can make sense of autonomy and authenticity. We aim to identify what kinds of preferences can (...)
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  • Behavioral economics and the evidential defense of welfare economics.Garth Heutel - 2024 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 23 (4):368-384.
    Hausman and McPherson provide an evidential defense of welfare economics, arguing that preferences are not constitutive of welfare but nevertheless provide the best evidence for what promotes welfare. Behavioral economics identifies several ways in which some people's preferences exhibit anomalies that are incoherent or inconsistent with rational choice theory. I argue that the existence of these behavioral anomalies calls into question the evidential defense of welfare economics. The evidential defense does not justify preference purification, or eliminating behavioral anomalies before conducting (...)
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