GreedyAlgorithm
Muse
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2005
- Messages
- 569
This is pretty much what I'm saying by "nonlinearity". Play 1000 times and *then* change money to utility and the picture looks like:I have a sense of what he means, as I did the first time it was raised. And, if I am correct, I think what he is saying is almost beside the point. If I may explain...
Negative value:
Loss of $1
Positive value:
1) The possibility of winning $1million.
This is an irrational reason for playing, as we all agree, because there is no real chance of winning;
2) Thrill of the possibility of winning $1million.
This is, at base, irrational because "the thrill" is possible only as a result of lack of recognition or denial of (1)
Negative value: Loss of $1000
Positive value: Thrill of the possibility of winning $1million, where the fact that this thrill occurs 1000 times gets washed out, and we ask ourselves "would I pay a thousand dollars for a cheap thrill?"
And in the correct form of this scenario, yes, even if your excitement made it good to play the lottery, it would still be irrational because you're getting "overly excited" about your actually dubious chance at winning.
(Although on the other hand I have trouble coming up with a "rational" reason to get so excited about the World Cup... if enough people agree that a thing is both irrational and good, maybe we need to reexamine the definition of rationality...)
But I would say that in some cases playing the lotto is still rational. Consider the admittedly fictional scenario in Run, Lola, Run.
She desperately needs... 10,000 marks I think? Within a half an hour? and determines the only possible way to get it in time is to win at roulette a couple of times in a row.
Or suppose that you want to start a business that requires lots of capital that you don't have (and you have a bad credit rating or something so that you can't borrow) (and that your age is getting a little bit up there, so the "make some money, turn it into more, etc. plan just doesn't cut it). You might well give up the fries from your lunch for a year to have a miniscule chance.