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Intelligent Democracy: Answering the New Democratic Scepticism (Philosophy, Politics, and Economics)

โœ Scribed by Jonathan Benson


Publisher
Oxford University Press
Year
2024
Tongue
English
Leaves
281
Category
Library

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โœฆ Synopsis


Whether due to Donald Trump, Brexit, or the rise of populism, many are increasingly questioning the value of democracy. Complaints of ignorant voters, irrational public debate, and disconnected politicians have led some to suggest that democracies are destined to make bad decisions, and to propose alternatives. In Intelligent Democracy, political theorist Jonathan Benson rejects this new democratic scepticism. He argues that democracies can make effective use of knowledge, engage in experimentation, utilise diversity, and motivate decisions towards the common good-and that they can do all these things better than their rivals. Benson pleads that we value democracy, not only because it treats us all equally, but because it is intelligent.
At the core of the book is the first systemic account of democracy's epistemic value. While it is common to focus on the faults of any one democratic body, Benson argues that democracy represents a much broader network of institutions which work together to produce a system which is more intelligent than any of its parts. The book examines how elections, deliberative assemblies, random sortition, and the open public sphere can be best connected, and offers innovative new proposals for improving our democratic systems. Through this approach, Benson shows that democracy is superior to regimes of epistocracy and political meritocracy which aim to empower the knowledgeable and exclude the ignorant, as well as proposals for granting greater powers to free markets or private companies. Drawing on work from political science, philosophy, and economics,
Intelligent Democracy produces a unique epistemic justification of democratic politics and a robust answer to its critics.

โœฆ Table of Contents


Cover
Intelligent Democracy
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: The New Democratic Scepticism
Defending the Intelligence of Democracy
Overview of the Book
1. Democracyโ€™s Epistemic Problems
Do Democracies Need to Make Good Decisions?
What Is a Good Political Decision?
What Makes an Institution Intelligent?
Institutional Diversity and the Priority of Democracy
A Note on Method
Responding to the New Democratic Scepticism
2. The Limits of Elections and Markets
The Epistemic Abilities of Elections and Markets
The Common Good and Other-โ€‹Regarding Decisions
The Incentive Problem
The Information Problem
The Invisible Hand of Elections and Markets
A Preliminary Case for Collective Politics
3. Democracy and the Division of Knowledge
Hayekโ€™s Division of Knowledge
The Division of Knowledge and the Deliberative System
A Systemic Division of Epistemic Labour
Collective Politics in the Deliberative System
Comparing Deliberative Systems
Knowledge Gathering in the Deliberative System
4. Bias, Misinformation, and the Democratic System
Failing to Find the Truth
Trust in the Deliberative System
A Politics of Bias and Misinformation
Not So Biased After All
Error Correction in the Deliberative System
Knowledge Evaluation in the Deliberative System
5. Polycentricity For and Against Democracy
The Polycentric Critique of Democracy
The Limits of Bottom-โ€‹Up Selection
The Benefits of Top-โ€‹Down Selection
Polycentricity within Democracy
Realizing the Polycentric Benefits of Deliberative Systems
Who Should Make Empowered Decisions?
6. Diversity and Political Problem-โ€‹Solving
Can Diversity Trump Ability?
Deliberating with Oracles
How Forceful Is the Force of the Better Argument?
An Alternative Model of Cognitive Diversity
How to Select for Diversity
The Threat of Deliberative Failures
How Far Can Diversity Take Us?
7. Elections and Elite Rule
The Conventional Democratic Solution
What Elections Can and Cannot Do
Political Meritocracy and Its Limits
Epistocracy and Its Limits
Is Representative Democracy the Best We Can Do?
8. The Sortition Branch
The Potential of Random Sortition
Deliberative Mini-โ€‹Publics and Their Limits
Randomly Selected Legislators and Their Limits
The Sortition Branch of a Deliberative System
The Sortition Branch as a Democratic Proposal
Intelligent Democracy as a More Participatory Democracy
Conclusion: A More Intelligent Democracy
References
Index


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