Introduction
First expressed by Allais in the early fifties, dissatisfaction with the expected utility model of individual risk taking behavior has mushroomed in recent years, as the number of papers in this volume, its predecessor (Allais & Hagen, 1979), and elsewhere indicates (see, e.g., Chew and MacCrimmon, 1979; Fishburn, 1982b, 1983; Handa, 1977; and Kahneman and Tversky, 1979). The nature of the current debate, i.e. whether to reject a theoretically elegant and heretofore tremendously useful descriptive model in light of accumulating evidence against its underlying assumptions, is a classic one in science, and the spur to new theoretical and empirical research which it is offering cannot help but leave economists, psychologists, and others who study this area with a better understanding of individual behavior toward risk.
In terms of its logical foundations, the expected utility model may be thought of as following from four assumptions concerning the individual's ordering of probability distributions over wealth: completeness (i.e. any two distributions can be compared), transitivity of both strict and weak preference, continuity, and the so-called “independence axiom.” This latter axiom, really the cornerstone of the theory, may be stated as “a risky prospect A is weakly preferred (i.e. preferred or indifferent) to a risky prospect B if and only if a p:(1 – p) chance of A or C respectively is weakly preferred to a p:(1 – p) chance of B or C, for arbitrary positive probability p and risky prospects A, B, and C”.