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Tom Sawyer and the Construction of Value
The authors argue that consumer valuations of goods and services are a lot more arbitrary than we may think, and are affected by several 'arbitrary' components and biases. They describe the phenomenon of 'Tom's Law', whereby Mark Twain's Tom Sawyer discovered a great law of human behavior: that in order to make a person covet a thing, it is only necessary to make the thing difficult to attain. They introduce the concept of 'coherent arbitrariness' and show how arbitrariness is enhanced by ambiguity in a good or bad experience.