Intuitive Political Theory: People's Judgments About How Groups Should Decide

被引:11
|
作者
DeScioli, Peter [1 ]
Bokemper, Scott E. [2 ]
机构
[1] SUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY 11794 USA
[2] Yale Univ, New Haven, CT 06520 USA
关键词
collective choice; intuitive theories; social choice; voting; vulnerable minority; SOCIAL CHOICE THEORY; DECISION-MAKING; PROCEDURAL JUSTICE; PSYCHOLOGY; HISTORY; RULES; MINDS; WANT; LAW;
D O I
10.1111/pops.12528
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
Societies must make collective decisions even when citizens disagree, and they use many different political processes to do so. But how do people choose one way to make a group decision over another? We propose that the human mind contains an intuitive political theory about how to make collective decisions, analogous to people's intuitive theories about language, physics, number, minds, and morality. We outline a simple method for studying people's intuitive political theory using scenarios about group decisions, and we begin to apply this approach in three experiments. Participants read scenarios in which individuals in a group have conflicting information (Experiment 1), conflicting interests (Experiment 2), and conflicting interests between a majority and a vulnerable minority who have more at stake (Experiment 3). Participants judged whether the group should decide by voting, consensus, leadership, or chance. Overall, we find that participants prefer majority-rule voting over consensus, leadership, and chance when a group has conflicting interests or information. However, participants' support for voting is considerably diminished when the group includes a vulnerable minority. Hence, participants showed an intuitive understanding of Madison's concerns about tyranny of the majority.
引用
收藏
页码:617 / 636
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] HOW MANY COMMONWEALTHS CAN LEVIATHAN SWALLOW? COVENANT, SOVEREIGN AND PEOPLE IN HOBBES'S POLITICAL THEORY?
    Sussmann, Naomi
    BRITISH JOURNAL FOR THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY, 2010, 18 (04) : 575 - 596
  • [22] People's conditional probability judgments follow probability theory (plus noise)
    Costello, Fintan
    Watts, Paul
    COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 89 : 106 - 133
  • [23] What's Different About Working with Older People in Groups?
    Toseland, Ronald W.
    Rizzo, Victoria M.
    JOURNAL OF GERONTOLOGICAL SOCIAL WORK, 2005, 44 (1-2): : 5 - 23
  • [24] Patients' intuitive judgments about surveillance endoscopy in Barrett's esophagus: a review and application to models of decision-making
    Hinojosa-Lindsey, M.
    Arney, J.
    Heberlig, S.
    Kramer, J. R.
    Street, R. L., Jr.
    El-Serag, H. B.
    Naik, A. D.
    DISEASES OF THE ESOPHAGUS, 2013, 26 (07) : 682 - 689
  • [25] Young people's reasoning about exclusion in novel groups
    Tenenbaum, Harriet R.
    Leman, Patrick J.
    Aznar, Ana
    Duthie, Rachel
    Killen, Melanie
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 175 : 1 - 16
  • [26] Young people's experiences of political membership: from political parties to Facebook groups
    Ekstrom, Mats
    Sveningsson, Malin
    INFORMATION COMMUNICATION & SOCIETY, 2019, 22 (02) : 155 - 171
  • [27] Children's judgments of and reasoning about people with disabilities who produce norm violations
    Granata, Nicolette
    Wiebe, Megan
    Lane, Jonathan D.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 215
  • [28] That's how people laughed in the East. Political jokes
    Bender, P
    MERKUR-DEUTSCHE ZEITSCHRIFT FUR EUROPAISCHES DENKEN, 2002, 56 (9-10): : 854 - 859
  • [29] How drug policy should (not) be: Institutionalised young people's perspectives
    Laenen, Freya
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DRUG POLICY, 2011, 22 (06) : 491 - 497
  • [30] Thinking about how to work - How should our division do its job with a limited number of people?
    Yamazaki, Tomoko
    ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY, 2019, 30 : 79 - 79