Articles

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Deliberative democracy in the face of irrationality and distrust

Frank Fischer’s Democracy and Expertise: Reorienting Policy Inquiry argues that the public in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries has increasingly gown critical and distrustful of the professions and their practices.

June 2012 / 5 min.


Nineteenth-century America was not a libertarian utopia

There is a commonly held perception that the United States in the nineteenth century lacked rules and regulations that we today commonly associate with intrusive “big government.”

May 2012 / 4 min.


Underdetermination and the balance between religion and science

The Duhem-Quine thesis, when simplified, explains how a given set of facts can produce more than one apparently true conclusion: essentially, different background assumptions lead to different outcomes.

April 2012 / 5 min.


Objectivity, science, and (a)political action

Theodore M. Porter, in Trust in Numbers, argues that the American distrust of elites – and of government itself – has led to a focus on “mechanical objectivity,” or rules to make decisions. In many ways similar to what American jurists call “procedural due process,” the idea is to diminish the necessity of personal judgement in favor of predictable, […]

April 2012 / 5 min.


David Noble on “The Religion of Technology”

In The Religion of Technology: The Divinity of Man and the Spirit of Invention, David Noble investigates the Western relationship between religion and technology.

April 2012 / 6 min.


Benefits of viewing the right to privacy as a property right

There are many approaches to protecting privacy, but many of them run into conflicts, either with existing protections (perhaps especially the First Amendment) or with those who are suspicious of government regulation. But privacy rights do not necessarily need to be protected in a novel new form as a new right – one could instead leverage existing theories of property to do it.

April 2012 / 7 min.


Four planning rules to avoid project disasters

One key reason to study history? To learn from the past: (1) take small steps. (2) favor reversibility, (3) plan on surprises, and (4) plan on human inventiveness.

April 2012 / 3 min.


The problem of expertise in a liberal democracy

Stephen Turner’s book, Liberal Democracy 3.0, provides a useful background to the problem of expertise – especially scientific expertise – in a modern liberal democracy. What is a liberal democracy? First, of course, it’s important to define what a “liberal democracy” is. The term liberal, unfortunately, has acquired a negative connotation for many today, especially amongst conservatives in the […]

April 2012 / 5 min.


Stephen Turner describes “The Social Study of Science before Kuhn”

Thomas Kuhn’s Structure of Scientific Revolutions – in many ways established the modern field of science studies. Stephen Turner provides a brief, socioligist’s version of the lead-up to Kuhn’s seminal book. Here’s a quick summary of his key points: Bacon and Comte Turner begins with Francis Bacon’s “The New Atlantis” (1627). Although Bacon’s work was more political […]

April 2012 / 5 min.


Problems with treating privacy as a property right

An alternative approach to creating an entirely new right to privacy would be to extend property rights to cover information or personal data, rather as intellectual property extended physical rules into the realm of the intangible.

April 2012 / 3 min.