enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Utility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility

    In economics, utility is a measure of a certain person's satisfaction from a certain state of the world. Over time, the term has been used with at least two meanings. In a normative context, utility refers to a goal or objective that we wish to maximize, i.e., an objective function.

  3. Existence value - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Existence_value

    Existence value is a prominent example of non-use value, as they do not require that utility be derived from direct use of the resource: the utility comes from simply knowing the resource exists. The idea was first introduced by John V. Krutilla in his essay "Conservation Reconsidered."

  4. Choice modelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choice_modelling

    In economics, random utility theory was then developed by Daniel McFadden [5] and in mathematical psychology primarily by Duncan Luce and Anthony Marley. [6] In essence, choice modelling assumes that the utility (benefit, or value) that an individual derives from item A over item B is a function of the frequency that (s)he chooses item A over ...

  5. Utilitarian bioethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utilitarian_bioethics

    Utilitarian bioethics refers to the branch of bioethics that incorporates principles of utilitarianism to directing practices and resources where they will have the most usefulness and highest likelihood to produce happiness, in regards to medicine, health, and medical or biological research.

  6. Cardinal utility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinal_utility

    In economics, a cardinal utility expresses not only which of two outcomes is preferred, but also the intensity of preferences, i.e. how much better or worse one outcome is compared to another. [ 1 ] In consumer choice theory , economists originally attempted to replace cardinal utility with the apparently weaker concept of ordinal utility .

  7. Ordinal utility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordinal_utility

    In economics, an ordinal utility function is a function representing the preferences of an agent on an ordinal scale. Ordinal utility theory claims that it is only meaningful to ask which option is better than the other, but it is meaningless to ask how much better it is or how good it is.

  8. Social welfare function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_welfare_function

    For example, if R prefers (2, 2, 4) to (1, 3, 4), it also prefers (2, 2, 9) to (1, 3, 9); the utility of agent 3 should not affect the comparison between two utility profiles of agents 1 and 2. This property can also be called locality or separability .

  9. Use value - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Use_value

    In neoclassical economics, this utility is ultimately subjectively determined by the buyer of a good, and not objectively by the intrinsic characteristics of the good. Thus, neoclassical economists often talk about the marginal utility of a product, i.e., how its utility fluctuates according to consumption patterns. This kind of utility is a ...