Perplexed comments on Costs and Benefits of Scholarship - Less Wrong

40 Post author: lukeprog 22 March 2011 02:19AM

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Comment author: Perplexed 23 March 2011 04:29:47PM 1 point [-]

The bandwagon effect is real, I think. My own behavior is to pay particular attention to heavily upvoted or downvoted comments to see if I can see the reason for the excitement. If I can't find a reason, I will often vote the opposite way, as you do. But I usually find the reason. And then I can't resist adding my voice to the crowd's.

Comment author: [deleted] 23 March 2011 06:35:30PM 1 point [-]

And since the upvoting and downvoting is silent and anonymous, the reasons for it should and I think do(#) tend to resemble the reasons of democratic voting, which reasons were discussed in Bryan Caplan's Myth of the Rational Voter - the point of the book being that the reasons tend to be irrational. The result is a phenomenon that is overall irrational, with occasional exceptions.

Granted, it might not be much of an improvement if voters had to add an explanation, since humans are nothing if not fantastic rationalizers.

(#) I say I think, because since the voting is silent and anonymous, no one but the voters can actually know, so anyone else is forced to come up with a hypothesis which fits the voting pattern.