Conversation

Every autumn, John Doe traveled a long distance for something he claimed was important, and this aroused the curiosity of a rational choice theorist. "What do you do there?" he asked. "I dote," John replied. "I dote on Sally, my granddaughter."
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"You go all the way to dote? How do you benefit from it?" "Benefit?" asked John, puzzled. "I dunno, I just dote on her. Little Sally, she's really something. She'll do great things some day -- make money, be famous, maybe even be president."
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"No, no, I mean, does your doting make it any more probable that she'll do great things than if you don't dote?" "More probable? Never thought about it. She'll do great things anyway. I like her best of all my grandchildren."
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The theorist, further perplexed, wondered whether Doe had considered the possibility that he would die before the benefits of doting could be enjoyed. The rational choice theorist never solved the riddle, but he posed the issues in a famous paper entitled "The Doter's Paradox."
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