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Explaining consumer choice

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: 2007 Palgrave Macmillan New YorkDescription: xii, 256 pISBN:
  • 9781403998620
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 658.8342 F6E9
Summary: With this book we have arrived at an intriguing point in the development of a theory of consumer choice in the context of marketing. Consumer behavior is usually explained by reference to the intentions of the buyer: She wants to buy this, or had a positive attitude toward it He needs that and intends to obtain one, and so on. But this kind of explanation is controversial throughout the social sciences, and it is essential that researchers acquire a reasoned framework of analysis within which intentionality can be convincingly ascribed to observed behavior in order to explain it. In addressing this issue in the context of consumer choice in marketing-driven economies, this book makes a substantial contribution to marketing theory. A means is proposed for the ascription of intentionalistic content in the explanation of behavior which is based on sound scientific reasoning: that of evolutionarily consistent neurological processes at the sub-personal level and that of consistent environment-behavior relationships at the super-personal level. The deficiencies of a purely descriptivist approach to consumer choice and of an extensional behavioral science of consumer choice have been exposed at the level of explanation (though they remain valid, indeed essential, approaches to the prediction and influence of consumer choice, suggest lines of explanation, and act as standpoints from which the prevailing cognitive orthodoxy can be uniquely critiqued). The result is a solid intellectual basis for the economic psychology of consumer choice and by extension marketing science. Written by an internationally acknowledged expert in the field in appropriate, accessible language, this book extends marketing thought, something that is highly necessary in a field dominated by the quest for practical results and the generation of empirical results that are unrelated to any overall framework of conceptualization and analysis. (http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?PID=274966)
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Item type Current library Item location Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Vikram Sarabhai Library Rack 40-A / Slot 2280 (2nd Floor, East Wing) General Stacks 658.8342 F6E9 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 171219

With this book we have arrived at an intriguing point in the development of a theory of consumer choice in the context of marketing. Consumer behavior is usually explained by reference to the intentions of the buyer: She wants to buy this, or had a positive attitude toward it He needs that and intends to obtain one, and so on. But this kind of explanation is controversial throughout the social sciences, and it is essential that researchers acquire a reasoned framework of analysis within which intentionality can be convincingly ascribed to observed behavior in order to explain it. In addressing this issue in the context of consumer choice in marketing-driven economies, this book makes a substantial contribution to marketing theory. A means is proposed for the ascription of intentionalistic content in the explanation of behavior which is based on sound scientific reasoning: that of evolutionarily consistent neurological processes at the sub-personal level and that of consistent environment-behavior relationships at the super-personal level. The deficiencies of a purely descriptivist approach to consumer choice and of an extensional behavioral science of consumer choice have been exposed at the level of explanation (though they remain valid, indeed essential, approaches to the prediction and influence of consumer choice, suggest lines of explanation, and act as standpoints from which the prevailing cognitive orthodoxy can be uniquely critiqued). The result is a solid intellectual basis for the economic psychology of consumer choice and by extension marketing science. Written by an internationally acknowledged expert in the field in appropriate, accessible language, this book extends marketing thought, something that is highly necessary in a field dominated by the quest for practical results and the generation of empirical results that are unrelated to any overall framework of conceptualization and analysis. (http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?PID=274966)

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