Rasmus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2005
- Messages
- 6,372
See, if you want to rationally justify playing the lottery occasionally, stop calculating in terms of dollars, and start calculating in terms of happiness
A buck or two every week or so has no effect on your ability to use money to buy happiness (assuming you can afford that buck or two). So the cost in happiness units *is* zero. Not just approximately zero, but it really does not make any difference.
Whereas winning would be *huge*. So even if it's infinitesimally probably, the payoff in terms of happiness-buying potential (assuming you assume being uber-rich would be uber-nice) is huge*tiny>0.
So in terms of utility/ happiness-buying-potential, as long as you keep your playing within bounds you can well afford, the expected payoff actually is positive.
That said, I've only very occasionally bought a scratch and win, and don't really ever play the lotto...
I am not sure; I guess I could find other ways of investing even tiny amounts that would have a better payoff. Maybe I could even find a risky strategy that might make me rich.
Suppose I invested in some silly pennystock; it might not be entirely impossible that some insignificant company discoveres or develops something big that would drive their stock through the roof. Chances might even be beter than with the lottery ...