54 ECONOMIC ESSAYS IN HONOR OF JOHN BATES CLARK
an approximate relation between price and utility, the theory
is true. While it is, as has been said, a natural derivative from
the Bentham psychology, it does not depend on the “calculus
of pleasure and pain,” but can be presented in terms of any
other description of human motives; so long as the motives
behave in a certain way. The essential assumption is that the
individual has a scale of values or preferences: good or bad,
wise or foolish, conscious or unconscious; and that his various
economic acts are the expressions of this one scale of values.’
They are consistent; the scale holds while he is making the
various decisions which are involved in the budgeting of his
time, energy and resources.” Thus the values in his personal
economy reach an equilibrium which is the parallel of the static
equilibrium of prices in a market. This fact is expressed either
as an actual tendency, or as an ideal of good personal manage-
ment. As indicated, it has sufficient truth to justify its place
in a static economics, being itself a static assumption.
In contrast, in the attempt to put together the most realistic
picture of human nature for which the materials are readily
available, one is struck by its prevailing dynamic character.
It contains static elements, but they differ essentially from the
static character of the marginal-utility assumption.
Man is a mechanism of stimulus and response, conditioned
not only by the present stimuli to which he may be exposed,
but by past stimuli which have played their part in shaping
the personality with which he now responds. Desires and ideas
are not separate, but ideas are themselves impulses to action.
Deliberative choice—the nearest approach to the rational action
of theory—is a check on this tendency to act on the immediate
stimulus, and a very imperfect check. Even the static ele-
ments of instinct or inborn tendency, habit and custom, change
their quality when placed in a changing environment. Adapted
to a past environment, they may be unadapted to the present,
1 No consideration is here given to that form of the utility theory which
attempts to be completely agnostic as to how human choices behave and
to deal only with momentary preferences. But the writer believes that
this type of theory acquires meaning just so far as there is attached to it
some premise as to how choices actually do behave.
2 The writer has elsewhere gone into this point in more detail. See
«Economics and Modern Psychology,” Jour. of Pol. Econ., 26; 1-30, 136-66 ;
Jan.-Feb., 1918. These articles contain the material on which this entire
section is based.