"Hélène Landemore's book is a landmark in the study of collective decision making. It scrutinizes and synthesizes a vast body of work, paying as much attention to the failures of deliberation and majority voting as to their achievements. Nobody working on normative theories of democracy can afford to ignore it."--Jon Elster, Columbia University
"Making an important contribution to democratic theory, this outstanding book takes seriously the possibility of popular rule and successful democratic decision making. Paying close attention to positive theory and empirical evidence, it offers a gust of fresh air. It will have a large audience both within and outside the political theory community."--Benjamin Page, Northwestern University
"Fresh voices--who understand cutting-edge social science--are badly needed in political theory and philosophy. With bold and plausible arguments, Landemore's important book is not more of the same old same old, but instead brings a whole different set of models and approaches to bear on democratic theory. A real achievement, Democratic Reason will have a wide readership."--Gerald Gaus, University of Arizona
"Using social-psychology tools that few scholars of democracy incorporate into their work, Democratic Reason represents a valuable interdisciplinary approach to understanding democracy. It invites us to expand our mental horizons in ways that are rarely seen in the world of normative political theory. Written with superb clarity and a masterful command of both the democratic-theory literature and the empirical literature on voting behavior, Landemore dares to think outside the box, honoring her very own concept of cognitive diversity."--Julia Maskivker, Review of Politics
"[D]emocratic Reason is well-written and well-researched, and it offers a powerful, anti-elitist antidote to recent theoretical and empirical critiques of democracy."--Choice CHAPTER ONE: The Maze and the Masses 1 CHAPTER TWO: Democracy as the Rule of the Dumb Many? 27 CHAPTER THREE: A Selective Genealogy of the Epistemic Argument for Democracy 53 CHAPTER FOUR: First Mechanism of Democratic Reason: Inclusive Deliberation 89 CHAPTER FIVE: Epistemic Failures of Deliberation 118 CHAPTER SIX: Second Mechanism of Democratic Reason: Majority Rule 145 CHAPTER SEVEN: Epistemic Failures of Majority Rule: Real and Imagined 185 CHAPTER EIGHT: Political Cognitivism: A Defense 208 CONCLUSION: Democracy as a Gamble Worth Taking 232 Bibliography 243
Prologue xv
Index 265