Bounded Rationality Updated: The 1st Conference of the Herbert Simon Society at the Italian Cultural Institute
The International Herbert A. Simon Society is based in Torino (Italy) where it was created in 2008 by an international group of scholars critical of the traditional paradigms of economic thinking that are at the origin of the recent financial crisis and of the many forecasting errors made by national and international financial institutions.
This scholarly association is named after the winner of the 1978 Nobel Prize for Economics Herbert A. Simon (1916-2001) who was the first to challenge radically the model of rationality used by neoclassical economics. Herbert Simon, an eclectic social scientist who was awarded the Nobel Prize "for his pioneering research into the decision-making process within economic organizations", is famous for his idea that only a limited type of procedural and subjective rationality (or Bounded Rationality) might enable economics to move beyond the abstraction and errors of contemporary doctrines.
The Simon Society thus seeks to connect scholars and academic research centers all over the world with the aim to modernize economic science and promote non-neoclassical directions such as behavioural and cognitive economics, neo-institutional economics, evolutionary economics, and organization theory. The Society, according to its web site, also offers its contribution in application to public and private economic decision-makers who want to update the instruments for analysis and forecasting.
The conference "Bounded Rationality Updated" is the society's first international conference and is subtitled "Slow and Fast Thinking, Creativity and Rational Expectations". These are themes dear to the Director of the Italian Cultural Institute Riccardo Viale, himself a scholar and an expert of cognitive economics as well as a founder of the Simon Society. It makes perfect sense thus that the Italian Cultural Istitute will be the main location for the very dense program of this conference which involves a host of prestigious panelists from several countries. The other location will be the Italian Academy at Columbia University.
The works will be concluded by another Nobel Prize for Economics (2001) Joseph Stiglitz, professor at Columbia University and author of many renowned books among which the best-selling Globalization and Its Discontents, translated into 35 languages.
Welcoming Remarks April 8 - 5:30 pm
Natalia Quintavalle (Consul General)
Riccardo Viale (Director Italian Cultural Institute)
Massimo Egidi (Herbert Simon Society)
Introduction: Katherine Simon Frank
Roy Radner: Bounded rationality: In search of a definition, April 9 - 9:00 am
Alan Kirman: Is it rational to have rational expectations? April 9 - 12:30 pm
Ron Sun: On implicit vs. explicit and fast vs. slow processes, April 9 - 2:30 pm
David Over: New paradigm psychology of reasoning and rationality, April 9 - 6:30 pm
Laura Macchi: The interpretative function of thinking in insight problem solving, April 10 - 9:00 am
Jonathan Schooler: Keeping the mind open for inspiration, April 10 - 12:30 pm
Joseph Stiglitz: Rethinking macroeconomics: What went wrong and how to fix it, April 10 - 6:30 pm
Parallel sessions on:
Rational expectations, bounded rationality, markets and investments
Slow and fast thinking Creativity and other stuff.
To know more, time and locations download full conference program >>>>
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