I think you’re mistaken about the marginal utility—being hit again after you’ve already been injured (especially if you’re hit on the same spot) is probably going to be worse than the first blow.
Marginal disutility could plausibly work in the opposite direction from marginal utility.
Each 10% of your money that you lose impacts your quality of life more. Each 10% of money that you gain impacts your quality of life less. There might be threshold effects for both, but I think the direction is right.
I was thinking more along the lines of scope failure: If some one said you were going to be hit 11 times would you really expect it to feel exactly 110% as bad as being hit ten times?
But yes, from a traditional economics point of view, your post makes a hell of a lot more sense. Upvoted.
I think you’re mistaken about the marginal utility—being hit again after you’ve already been injured (especially if you’re hit on the same spot) is probably going to be worse than the first blow.
Marginal disutility could plausibly work in the opposite direction from marginal utility.
Each 10% of your money that you lose impacts your quality of life more. Each 10% of money that you gain impacts your quality of life less. There might be threshold effects for both, but I think the direction is right.
I was thinking more along the lines of scope failure: If some one said you were going to be hit 11 times would you really expect it to feel exactly 110% as bad as being hit ten times?
But yes, from a traditional economics point of view, your post makes a hell of a lot more sense. Upvoted.