Hopefully, you are not addressing an important distinction. You haven’t said what is to be done with it. The passage that I quoted includes these words:
while another bundle of goods is affordable
The bundles of goods that are affordable are precisely the bundle of goods among which we choose.
Hopefully writes: constant: buys, eats, etc. Here it’s not any more necessary to assert or imply deliberation (which is what I think you mean by saying “choice”
No, it is not what I mean. A person chooses among actions A, B, and C, if he has the capacity to perform any of A, B, or C, and in fact performs (say) C. It does not matter whether he deliberates or not. The distinction between capacity and incapacity takes many forms; in the definition which I quoted the capacity/incapacity distinction takes the form of an affordability/unaffordability distinction.
Hopefully, you are not addressing an important distinction. You haven’t said what is to be done with it. The passage that I quoted includes these words:
The bundles of goods that are affordable are precisely the bundle of goods among which we choose.
Hopefully writes: constant: buys, eats, etc. Here it’s not any more necessary to assert or imply deliberation (which is what I think you mean by saying “choice”
No, it is not what I mean. A person chooses among actions A, B, and C, if he has the capacity to perform any of A, B, or C, and in fact performs (say) C. It does not matter whether he deliberates or not. The distinction between capacity and incapacity takes many forms; in the definition which I quoted the capacity/incapacity distinction takes the form of an affordability/unaffordability distinction.