Abstract

Seeing — perception and vision — is implicitly the fundamental building block of the literature on rationality and cognition. Herbert Simon and Daniel Kahneman's arguments against the omniscience of economic agents — and the concept of bounded rationality — depend critically on a particular view of the nature of perception and vision. We propose that this framework of rationality merely replaces economic omniscience with perceptual omniscience. We show how the cognitive and social sciences feature a pervasive but problematic meta-assumption that is characterized by an eye. We raise concerns about this assumption and discuss different ways in which the all-seeing eye manifests itself in existing research on (bounded) rationality. We first consider the centrality of vision and perception in Simon's pioneering work. We then point to Kahneman's work — particularly his article Maps of Bounded Rationality — to illustrate the pervasiveness of an all-seeing view of perception, as manifested in the extensive use of visual examples and illusions. Similar assumptions about perception can be found across a large literature in the cognitive sciences. The central problem is the present emphasis on inverse optics — the objective nature of objects and environments, e.g., size, contrast, and color. This framework ignores the nature of the organism and perceiver. We argue instead that reality is constructed and expressed, and we discuss the species-specificity of perception, as well as perception as a user interface. We draw on vision science as well as the arts to develop an alternative understanding of rationality in the cognitive and social sciences. We conclude with a discussion of the implications of our arguments for the rationality and decision-making literature in cognitive psychology and behavioral economics, along with suggesting some ways forward.

Highlights

  • Utrecht, The Netherlands 4 Cognitive, Linguistic, and Psychological Sciences, BrownUniversity, Rhode Island, USAOur faculty of sight plays a central role in prominent theories of rationality—and assumptions about vision and perception lie at the very core of the cognitive, economic, and social sciences

  • We argue that the literature on rationality features a unifying but problematic assumption about vision and perception that is best characterized by an Ballseeing eye^

  • We focus on how the all-seeing view of perception manifests itself in research on rationality, cognition, and decision-making

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Summary

Introduction

The Netherlands 4 Cognitive, Linguistic, and Psychological Sciences, BrownUniversity, Rhode Island, USAOur faculty of sight plays a central role in prominent theories of rationality—and assumptions about vision and perception lie at the very core of the cognitive, economic, and social sciences. The central argument in this literature is that perception, over time, is veridical rather than biased: organisms perceive and interact with their environments and over time learn its true, objective nature.

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