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Levon Saiyan's avatar

The notion of a Lottocracy is a SERIOUSLY underrated idea. There's no perfect system but we can do better than democracy.

John A. Johnson's avatar

I am not sure you should revealing this much truth. I don't know how many people can handle it.

Bryan Caplan's explanation for voting (that it gives us a warm glow) is not incorrect; it is only incomplete because it cites a proximate cause without mentioning a distal, evolutionary cause. Many explanations in the behavioral sciences boil down to people seeking what makes them feel good and avoiding what makes them feel bad. Evolutionary psychology explains why things make us feel good or bad, providing a more complete picture. Thank you for offering a plausible evolutionary explanation for voting.

Groups do suck for many reasons, and you mention some of the important reasons. I especially appreciated the observation about the way thinking in terms of groups leads to black-and-white thinking, a topic I have also written about, https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/cui-bono/201209/the-unsavory-psychology-two-party-politics . One thing that you did not emphasize about groups is just how inefficient and ineffective they are for helping individuals acquire what they want. Just think about how helpful typical faculty meetings are for helping you achieve your personal goals. The "strength in numbers" mentality might have worked for the limited, basic goals of small hominid bands, but I've found that operating as an individual with a limited number of other individuals-as-individuals has been enough for me to lead a pretty satisfying life.

In my view, quasi-rationalistic schemes such as Pigouvian taxes, utilitarianism, and effective altruism are always going to fall short because the number crunching is too difficult for individuals. How in the world are we supposed to accurately predict through computations the future negative externalities of goods and services? Or which acts will bring the most happiness to the most number of people? Or which of the issues addressed by effective charities will be the most important for overall flourishing in the world? (Effective altruists do have data on the efficiency of specific charities, but who knows which of the issues addressed by the various charities will truly matter for the long-run wellbeing of everyone--including nonhuman animals and plants--on the planet?)

Markets, on the other hand do not require us to crunch numbers as individuals. Support for free markets led me to the Libertarian Party for a period of time. Until I saw that the LP was a supergroup party that behaved just as badly as Republicans and Democrats.

When it comes to voting, I am going to keep voting for whoever seems to be the least offensive candidate, even though I realize my vote makes no difference. The advantage I see to voting is that when some asshole gets elected, people can't criticize me for not voting for the person who didn't get elected. No warm glow for me. Just freedom from nagging people.

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