Skip to product information
1 of 1

The Irrational Decision

Regular price $29.95
Sale price $29.95 Regular price $29.95
Sale Sold out
How the computer revolution shaped our conception of rationality—and why human problems require solutions rooted in human intuition, morality, and judgmentIn the 1940s, mathematicians set out to de...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 10 March 2026
View Product Details

How the computer revolution shaped our conception of rationality—and why human problems require solutions rooted in human intuition, morality, and judgment

In the 1940s, mathematicians set out to design computers that could act as ideal rational agents in the face of uncertainty. The Irrational Decision tells the story of how they settled on a peculiar mathematical definition of rationality in which every decision is a statistical question of risk. Benjamin Recht traces how this quantitative standard came to define our understanding of rationality, looking at the history of optimization, game theory, statistical testing, and machine learning. He explains why, now more than ever, we need to resist efforts by powerful tech interests to drive public policy and essentially rule our lives.

While mathematical rationality has proven valuable in accelerating computers, regulating pharmaceuticals, and deploying electronic commerce, it fails to solve messy human problems and has given rise to a view of a rational world that is not only overquantified but surprisingly limited. Recht shows how these mathematical methods emerged from wartime research and influenced fields ranging from economics to health care, drawing on illuminating examples ranging from diet planning to chess to self-driving cars.

Highlighting both the power and limitations of mathematical rationality, The Irrational Decision reveals why only humans can resolve fundamentally political or value-based questions and proposes a more expansive approach to decision making that is appropriately supported by computational tools yet firmly rooted in human intuition, morality, and judgment.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $29.95
Pages: 280
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Imprint: Princeton University Press
Publication Date: 10 March 2026
ISBN: 9780691272443
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

COMPUTERS / Social Aspects, Mathematical theory of computation, COMPUTERS / History, COMPUTERS / Computer Science, MATHEMATICS / Social & Cultural Aspects, MATHEMATICS / History & Philosophy, TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / History, Computer science, Impact of science and technology on society, History of mathematics, History of ideas, Philosophy of mathematics

"Clear, authoritative, easy to follow, and full of quotable phrases about the folly of giving optimizers and computers the power to govern our lives."---Jathan Sadowski, Critical AI
Benjamin Recht is professor of electrical engineering and computer sciences at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author (with Stephen J. Wright) of Optimization for Data Analysis and (with Moritz Hardt) Patterns, Predictions, and Actions: Foundations of Machine Learning (Princeton).