This articlerelies excessively onreferences toprimary sources. Please improve this article by addingsecondary or tertiary sources. Find sources: "Rational irrationality" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR(October 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
The concept known asrational irrationality was popularized by economistBryan Caplan in 2001 to reconcile the widespread existence ofirrational behavior (particularly in the realms ofreligion andpolitics) with the assumption ofrationality made by mainstreameconomics andgame theory.[1][2] The theory, along with its implications for democracy, was expanded upon by Caplan in his bookThe Myth of the Rational Voter.
The original purpose of the concept was to explain how (allegedly) detrimental policies could be implemented in a democracy, and, unlike conventionalpublic choice theory, Caplan posited that bad policies were selected by voters themselves. The theory has also been embraced by theethical intuitionist philosopherMichael Huemer as an explanation for irrationality in politics.[3][4] The theory has also been applied to explainreligious belief.[5]
Caplan posits that there are two types of rationality:
Rational irrationality describes a situation in which it isinstrumentally rational for an actor to beepistemically irrational.
Caplan argues that rational irrationality is more likely in situations in which:
In the framework ofneoclassical economics, Caplan posits that there is ademand for irrationality. A person'sdemand curve describes the amount of irrationality that the person is willing to tolerate at any given cost of irrationality. By thelaw of demand, the lower the cost of irrationality, the higher the demand for it. When the cost of error is effectively zero, a person's demand for irrationality is high.
Rational irrationality is notdoublethink and does not state that the individual deliberately chooses to believe something he or she knows to be false. Rather, the theory is that when the costs of having erroneous beliefs are low, people relax their intellectual standards and allow themselves to be more easily influenced byfallacious reasoning,cognitive biases, andemotional appeals. In other words, people do not deliberately seek to believe false things but stop putting in the intellectual effort to be open to evidence that may contradict their beliefs.
For rational irrationality to exist, people must have preferences over beliefs: certain beliefs must be appealing to people for reasonsother than their truth value. In an essay on irrationality in politics Michael Huemer[3] identifies some possible sources of preferences over beliefs:
Many of the claims ofreligions are not easily verifiable in the day-to-day world. There are many competing religious theories about theorigins of life,reincarnation, andparadise, but mistaken beliefs about these rarely impose real world costs upon the believers themselves. Thus, it may be instrumentally rational to be epistemically irrational about these matters. In other words, when forming or updating their religious beliefs, people may tend to relax their intellectual standards for the sake of driving popular support towards their beliefs.[5]
Politics is a situation where rational irrationality is expected to be common, according to Caplan's theory. In typical largedemocracies, each individual voter has a very low probability of influencing the outcome of an election or determining whether a particular policy will be implemented. Thus, the expected cost of supporting an erroneous policy (obtained by multiplying the cost of the policy by the probability that the individual voter will have a decisive role in influencing the policy) is very low. The psychological benefits of supporting policies that feel good but are in fact harmful may be greater than these small expected costs. This creates a situation where voters may be rationally irrational for practical morale reasons.
For rational irrationality at an individual level to have an effect on political outcomes, it is necessary that there besystemic ways in which people are irrational. In other words, people need to havesystemic biases: there needs to be a systemic difference between people's preferences over beliefs and true beliefs. In the absence of systemic biases, different forms of irrationality would cancel out when aggregated using the voting process.
Caplan attempts to demonstrate empirically the existence of systemic biases in beliefs abouteconomics in his bookThe Myth of the Rational Voter.
When a large number of individuals hold systematically biased beliefs, thetotal cost to the democracy of all these irrational beliefs could be significant. Thus, even though every individual voter may be behaving rationally, the voters as a whole are not acting in their collective self-interest. This is analogous to thetragedy of the commons. Another way of thinking about it is that each voter, by being rationally irrational, creates a small negativeexternality for other voters.
Caplan believes that the rational irrationality of voters is one of the reasons why democracies choose suboptimal economic policies, particularly in the area offree trade versusprotectionism. PhilosopherMichael Huemer, in aTEDx talk on rational irrationality in politics, cited thewar on terror andprotectionism as two examples of rational irrationality in politics.[4]
Any theory of democracy must take into account the empirical fact that most voters in a democracy have very little idea about the details of politics, including the names of their elected representatives, the terms of office, and the platforms of candidates of major political parties.
Like rational irrationality, some theories of democracy claim that democracies tend to choose bad policies. Other theories claim that despite the empirical observations about voter ignorance, democracies do in fact do fairly well. Below are listed some of these theories and their relation to rational irrationality.
The most famous theory of democratic failure ispublic choice theory. The theory, developed byJames Buchanan,Gordon Tullock, and others, relies onrational ignorance. Voters have a very small probability of influencing policy outcomes, so they do not put much effort to stay up-to-date on politics. This allowsspecial interests to manipulate the political process and engage inrent seeking. A key idea of public choice theory is that many harmful policies haveconcentrated benefits (experienced by special interests) and diffuse costs. The special interests experiencing the benefits are willing to lobby for the policies, while the costs are spread out very diffusely among a much larger group of people. Because these costs are diffuse, the people bearing the costs do not have enough at stake to lobby against the policies.
Rational irrationality and rational ignorance share some key similarities but are also different in a number of ways. The similarities are that both theories reject the claim that voters are rational and well-informed, and both theories claim that democracy does not function well. However, the theories differ in a number of ways:
There are two main objections to public choice theory and rational ignorance that do not apply to rational irrationality:
Brennan and Lomasky have an alternative theory of democratic failure that is quite similar to Caplan's theory of rational irrationality. Their theory, calledexpressive voting, states that people vote toexpress certain beliefs. The key difference between expressive voting and rational irrationality is that the former does not require people to actuallyhold systematically biased beliefs, while the latter does.
Loren Lomasky, one of the proponents of expressive voting, explained some of the key differences between the theories in a critical review of Caplan's book.[6]
Donald Wittman has argued that democracy works well.[7] Wittman's argument rests on raising a number of objections to public choice theory, such as those outlined above while contrasting public choice theory and rational irrationality. Caplan described his own work on rational irrationality as an attempt to rescue democratic failure from Wittman's attacks. After the publication of Caplan's book, Wittman and Caplan debated each other.[8]