No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 October 2022
Bermúdez argues that framing effects are rational because particular frames provide goal-consistent reasons for choice and that people exert some control over the framing of a decision-problem. We propose instead that these observations raise the question of whether frame selection itself is a rational process and highlight how constraints in the choice environment severely limit the rational selection of frames.
Target article
Rational framing effects: A multidisciplinary case
Related commentaries (27)
Ceteris paribus preferences, rational farming effects, and the extensionality principle
A reputational perspective on rational framing effects
Biases and suboptimal choice by animals suggest that framing effects may be ubiquitous
Competing reasons, incomplete preferences, and framing effects
Consistent preferences, conflicting reasons, and rational evaluations
Defining preferences over framed outcomes does not secure agents' rationality
Distinguishing self-involving from self-serving choices in framing effects
Even simple framing effects are rational
Explaining bias with bias
Four frames and a funeral: Commentary on Bermúdez (2022)
Frames, trade-offs, and perspectives
Framing is a motivated process
Framing provides reasons
Framing, equivalence, and rational inference
Incomplete preferences and rational framing effects
Probably, approximately useful frames of mind: A quasi-algorithmic approach
Quasi-cyclical preferences in the ethics of Plato, Aristotle, and Kant
Rational framing effects and morally valid reasons
Rationality as the end of thought
Reframing rationality: Exogenous constraints on controlled information search
Self-control modulates information salience
The ecological benefits of being irrationally moral
The framing of decisions “leaks” into the experiencing of decisions
The polyphony principle
The received view of framing
The study of rational framing effects needs developmental psychology
Why framing effects can be rational
Author response
Frames and rationality: Response to commentators