This 'fix' for economic theory changes everything from gambles to Ponzi schemes
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/12/191202113024.htm
According to author Ole Peters (London Mathematical Laboratory, Santa Fe Institute), people's real-world behavior often "deviates starkly" from what standard economic theory would recommend. Take the example of a simple coin toss: Most people would not gamble on a repeated coin toss where a heads would increase their net worth by 50%, but a tails would decrease it by 40%.
"Would you accept the gamble and risk losing at the toss of a coin 40% of your house, car and life savings?" Peters asks, echoing a similar objection raised by Nicholas Bernoulli in 1713.
This 'fix' for economic theory changes everything from gambles to Ponzi schemes
Dec 2, 2019, 8:42pm UTC
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/12/191202113024.htm
> According to author Ole Peters (London Mathematical Laboratory, Santa Fe Institute), people's real-world behavior often "deviates starkly" from what standard economic theory would recommend. Take the example of a simple coin toss: Most people would not gamble on a repeated coin toss where a heads would increase their net worth by 50%, but a tails would decrease it by 40%.
> "Would you accept the gamble and risk losing at the toss of a coin 40% of your house, car and life savings?" Peters asks, echoing a similar objection raised by Nicholas Bernoulli in 1713.