A main topic in welfare economics is the rational behaviour of a
consumer when, faced with various prices and incomes, he has to make a
choice. The theory of consumption establishes the framework in which the
rationality of consumers is de?ned and the principle on which it is
based. By [109], "the rationality of a consumer may be described by
postulating that a consumer has a de?nite preference over all
conceivable commodity bundles and that he chooses those commodity
bundles that are optimal with respect to his preference subject to
budgetary constraints". Samuelson's theory of revealed preference
expresses the rationality of a consumer in terms of some preference
relation associated with a demand fu- tion. The foundation of this
theory is built on The Weak Axiom of Consumer Behavior [87] and on The
Strong Axiom of Consumer Behavior [63]. The s- ond axiom assures that
the demand function can be reconstructed from a revealed preference
relation. To make a rational choice is a more general problem that goes
beyond the theme of consumer. In economics, social life, medicine,
psychology, etc. there are several cases when an agent has to make
rational decisions. For instance, when the members of a society vote
di?erent candidates in an election, a plausible hypothesis is that,
having a desideratum, each of them is rational in the act of choice.