Lecture Notes In Microeconomic Theory: The Economic Agent
by Ariel Rubinstein /
2006 / English / PDF
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Lecture Notes in Microeconomic Theory
Lecture Notes in Microeconomic Theory is the first
publication of Ariel Rubinstein's lecture notes from the first
part of his well-known course in microeconomic theory, which he
has taught for fifteen years to first-year graduate students at
Tel Aviv, Princeton, and New York universities. The book will be
an invaluable supplement to primary textbooks in microeconomic
theory. Conveying the style and method of Rubinstein's lectures,
it will benefit teachers and research economists as well as
students. The book focuses on and provides a critical assessment
of models of rational economic agents, and it contains a large
number of original problems.
is the first
publication of Ariel Rubinstein's lecture notes from the first
part of his well-known course in microeconomic theory, which he
has taught for fifteen years to first-year graduate students at
Tel Aviv, Princeton, and New York universities. The book will be
an invaluable supplement to primary textbooks in microeconomic
theory. Conveying the style and method of Rubinstein's lectures,
it will benefit teachers and research economists as well as
students. The book focuses on and provides a critical assessment
of models of rational economic agents, and it contains a large
number of original problems.
Rubinstein, one of the world's most-respected economics
theorists, has made substantial contributions to several fields
in economics, particularly game theory. His work is characterized
by an unusual combination of deep originality and surprising
simplicity. He is probably best known for his contributions to
the bargaining problem and, more recently, to bounded
rationality.
Rubinstein, one of the world's most-respected economics
theorists, has made substantial contributions to several fields
in economics, particularly game theory. His work is characterized
by an unusual combination of deep originality and surprising
simplicity. He is probably best known for his contributions to
the bargaining problem and, more recently, to bounded
rationality.