This is a tiny question that I wouldn't be asking if I had paid more attention in economics class. Anyway, a friend of mine was at the mall with me and he needed to go to the mall parking to retrieve his car. However, if he played at the mall casino, the parking fee would be waived. Without much interest, I heard him calculate his options out loud, until he got to this part:
"The parking fee is $4. I might get that amount waived yet lose more than that at the casino. Or I could play at the casino and win, in which case my expected value is whatever I win plus $4..."
At that moment I felt I had to intervene:
"You don't get to add the parking fee to your expected value if you win at the casino; you merely don't substract it."
But he kept insisting that he could add it. We didn't meet later to check his numbers, but I was left with this question.
Was my objection accurate?
You are right in the sense that playing at the casino doesn't give your friend an extra four dollars but since utility is relative it depends on your perspective. Allow me to explain
This demonstrates your view. C is the money lost or gained by playing at the casino.
Pay Parking outcome = -4$, Casino outcome = C
And this demonstrates your friends view
Pay Parking outcome = 0 , Casino outcome = C+4 (It's the same as your view but +4 has been added to both sides)
If you apply a modifier (in this case +4) to all choices then the difference between them stays the same and a perfect utility maximizer will still make the same choice.
Humans are not perfect utility maximizers and so the modifier you apply to outcomes can have a effect on mood. For example a scenario where you have lost 50$ in order to keep $100. A possible view is that you
Each option makes no difference to computer algortithm because it just cares about relative weights. A human however is going to be a lot happier if they view it as a gain instead of a loss.