Isn't methodological individualism - the determination to formulate
explanations in economics in terms of individuals - just altogether
beside the point when economists don't even know what individuals are?
Don Ross argues in Economic Theory and Cognitive Science that human
selves are not economic agents, as most economists think, but are rather
communities of many subpersonal agents engaged in evolutionary games who
interact in evolutionary games with other human selves communities of
many subpersonal agents engaged in evolutionary games. Phil Mirowski
argues in Machine Dreams that the economic individual is a cybernetic
organism without detectable interface between computational machine and
human qualities or between real and simulacra. I argue in Theory of the
Individual in Economics that the utility function offers a circular and
empty basis for the concept of the individual and that economists have
never solved the multiple selves problem. So how could one be a
methodological individualist? Methodological about what?
John Davis