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  • Research staff, Spanish Council for Scientific Research-CSIC
  • PhD, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, 1991.

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About me
Fernando Aguiar (faguiar@iesa.csic.es) is a tenured scientist at the Institute for Advanced Social Studies–Spanish Council for Scientific Research (IESA-CSIC). His research interests cover rational choice theory, social identity, experimental philosophy, and republicanism. He has published on these subjects in "European Journal of Sociology", "Judgment and Decision Making", "Experimental Economics", "Philosophy of the Social Sciences" and "Revista Internacional de Sociología".
My works
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  • Fernando Aguiar & Andrés de Francisco (2009). Rational Choice, Social Identity, and Beliefs About Oneself. Philosophy of the Social Sciences 39 (4).
    Social identity poses one of the most important challenges to rational choice theory, but rational choice theorists do not hold a common position regarding identity. On one hand, externalist rational choice ignores the concept of identity or reduces it to revealed preferences. On the other hand, internalist rational choice considers identity as a key concept in explaining social action because it permits expressive motivations to be included in the models. However, internalist theorists tend to reduce identity to desire —the desire (...)
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  • Fernando Aguiar, Pablo Brañas-Garza & Luis Miller (2008). Moral Distance in Dictators Games. Judgment and Decision Making 3 (4):344-354.
    We perform an experimental investigation using a dictator game in which individuals must make a moral decision —to give or not to give an amount of money to poor people in the Third World. A questionnaire in which the subjects are asked about the reasons for their decision shows that, at least in this case, moral motivations carry a heavy weight in the decision: the majority of dictators give the money for reasons of a consequentialist nature. Based on the results (...)
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