I think the idea (whether it would work in not in reality is another matter) is that by forcing normal people to accept responsibility, such as in jury duty, you force them to have to be accountable for their decisions and mistakes even from basic social shame instead of just spouting populist opinions.Utisz wrote: ↑Wed May 05, 2021 5:33 amReason as a sort of social justification for intuition is kind of an interesting concept, and it makes sense in terms of the idea of confirmation bias. The idea of a lottocracy is kind of intriguing too, though unabated populism cannot be a good thing either, can it?
Dialectics
Re: Dialectics
Ex falso, quodlibet
Re: Dialectics
I guess there's also an element of wisdom of the crowds, or somehow that they might veer away from simple populism by merit of having been given temporary responsibility and the necessity to talk with people like adults. (Sounds too idyllic overall though.)Ferrus wrote: ↑Wed May 05, 2021 10:49 amI think the idea (whether it would work in not in reality is another matter) is that by forcing normal people to accept responsibility, such as in jury duty, you force them to have to be accountable for their decisions and mistakes even from basic social shame instead of just spouting populist opinions.
Well the constitutional process here is taking a similar-ish line. People are still elected, but none of them are from the political classes in general.