Democratic answers to complex questions - an epistemic perspective

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Abstract

This paper addresses a problem for theories of epistemic democracy. In a decision on a complex issue which can be decomposed into several parts, a collective can use different voting procedures: Either its members vote on each sub-question and the answers that gain majority support are used as premises for the conclusion on the main issue (premise based-procedure, pbp), or the vote is conducted on the main issue itself (conclusion-based procedure, cbp). The two procedures can lead to different results. We investigate which of these procedures is better as a truth-tracker, assuming that there exists a true answer to be reached. On the basis of the Condorcet jury theorem, we show that the pbp is universally superior if the objective is to reach truth for the right reasons. If one instead is after truth for whatever reasons, right or wrong, there will be cases in which the cbp is more reliable, even though, for the most part, the pbp still is to be preferred.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)131-153
JournalSynthese
Volume150
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2006

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Philosophy

Free keywords

  • deliberative democracy
  • epistemic democracy
  • voting procedures
  • judgment aggregation
  • discursive dilemma
  • Condorcet jury theorem
  • pettit

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