I don't think that this is plagiarism

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ataloss
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I don't think that this is plagiarism

Post by ataloss »

on the tmf board it has been suggested that there is a similarity betweeen hocus' famous coin toss post and the Terhorst passage in this thread. Those who have posted those comments are, of course, entitled to their opinions but from what I can tell this isn't plagiarism:

http://boards.fool.com/Message.asp?mid=17389587
http://nofeeboards.com/boards/viewtopic.php?t=1613

Thanks to FMO for the Terhorst passage. Apologies to those who don't have or use tmf access (and those who don't give a rat's $%#)
Have fun.

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Didn't Daniel Bernoulli get there first, in 1738?

Post by therealchips »

Consume less to enjoy life more. Living with this new state of mind works because of what economists call the Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility. I call it the Coin Toss Law.


Who published first, Terhorst or hocus? I haven't followed the discussion so I don't know who might have plagiarized whom. I find TMF too gloomy to visit -- a pale, grim, distorted shadow of what it once was, rather like a ghost for scaring folks at Halloween.

Terhorst's description of the Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility seems erroneous to me. Simply stated, the law of marginal utility asserts that the value of the next dollar you add to your wealth depends on the how much wealth you have already and declines the more you have. Terhorst's Coin Toss bears no useful resemblance to Bernoulli's Paradox on a coin-tossing game. Terhorst seems to have oversimplified Bernoulli to the point of missing its significance.

Pardon me for yet one more quotation of the following material, but it isn't clear to me that either hocus or Terhorst got there ahead of Daniel Bernoulli in 1738:
The expected utility hypothesis stems from Daniel Bernoulli's (1738) solution to the famous St. Petersburg Paradox posed in 1713 by his cousin Nicholas Bernoulli (it is common to note that Gabriel Cramer, another Swiss mathematician, also provided effectively the same solution ten years before Bernoulli). The Paradox challenges the old idea that people value random ventures according to its expected return. The Paradox posed the following situation: a fair coin will be tossed until a head appears; if the first head appears on the nth toss, then the payoff is 2n ducats. How much should one pay to play this game? The paradox, of course, is that the expected return is infinite. . .Yet while the expected payoff is infinite, one would not suppose, at least intuitively, that real-world people would be willing to pay an infinite amount of money to play this!

Daniel Bernoulli's solution involved two ideas that have since revolutionized economics: firstly, that people's utility from wealth, u(w), is not linearly related to wealth (w) but rather increases at a decreasing rate - the famous idea of diminishing marginal utility, (Chips: here it gives some expressions using the notation of the calculus with the intuitive meaning that each additional dollar contributes something to the owner's utility, but that the increase is less for each subsequent dollar) ; (ii) that a person's valuation of a risky venture is not the expected return of that venture, but rather the expected utility from that venture.
He who has lived obscurely and quietly has lived well. [Latin: Bene qui latuit, bene vixit.]

Chips
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ataloss
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Post by ataloss »

Hi chips, In terms of publishing I think it was Bernoulli then Terhorst
then hocus. To be fair Terhorst may have been the first to specifically link this to personal finance and iirc hocus said that he was the first to use it in the swr context (although I don't entirely understand his conclusion)
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Ataloss
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BenSolar
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Post by BenSolar »

ataloss wrote: To be fair Terhorst may have been the first to specifically link this to personal finance


I think Bernoulli's is pretty explicitly about personal finance, too. :)
"Do not spoil what you have by desiring what you have not; remember that what you now have was once among the things only hoped for." - Epicurus
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