ABSTRACT

All of human life may be seen as a process of decision-making, but it is only in recent years and in response to the needs of the large and complex organizations characterizing our society that this process has been subjected to scientifi c scrutiny. Out of this scrutiny-undertaken by a wide range of professionals in economics, administration, management, statistics, psychology, engineering, computer science, operations research, and systems analysis-there has begun to emerge a body of theory that has profound implications for improving practical decision-making. This book is the fi rst to bring together all the various aspects of decision theory into one cohesive treatment.

chapter 1|13 pages

SOME CONCEPTS AND THEIR INTERPRETATION

chapter 2|70 pages

THEORIES OF CHOICE, VALUE AND UNCERTAINTY

chapter 3|29 pages

DECIDABILITY

chapter 5|11 pages

INFORMATION FOR DECISION

chapter 6|10 pages

PRAGMATIC ASPECTS OF DECISION THEORY

chapter 7|22 pages

MATHEMATICAL MODELS AND DECISION