Publication: Neither Hayek Nor Habermas
Date
2008
Authors
Published Version
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Verlag
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.
Citation
Cass Sunstein, Neither Hayek Nor Habermas, 134 Pub. Choice 87 (2008).
Research Data
Abstract
The rise of the blogosphere raises important questions about the elicitation and aggregation of information, and about democracy itself. Do blogs allow people to check information and correct errors? Can we understand the blogosphere as operating as a kind of marketplace for information along Hayekian terms? Or is it a vast public meeting of the kind that Jurgen Habermas describes? In this article, I argue that the blogosphere cannot be understood as a Hayekian means for gathering dispersed knowledge because it lacks any equivalent of the price system. I also argue that forces of polarization characterize the blogosphere as they do other social interactions, making it an unlikely venue for Habermasian deliberation, and perhaps leading to the creation of information cocoons. I conclude by briefly canvassing partial responses to the problem of polarization.
Description
Other Available Sources
Keywords
Terms of Use
Metadata Only