Difference between revisions of "Asymmetric institution"

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(Examples of asymmetric institutions)
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* debate (of the civil/rational kind, not a shouting match):  
 
* debate (of the civil/rational kind, not a shouting match):  
 
* charity evaluation based on some strict criteria: [[GiveWell]] gains influence by evaluating charities, but it cannot promote any charity it wishes; it can only promote e.g. charities whose interventions perform well under a randomized controlled trial
 
* charity evaluation based on some strict criteria: [[GiveWell]] gains influence by evaluating charities, but it cannot promote any charity it wishes; it can only promote e.g. charities whose interventions perform well under a randomized controlled trial
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* Wikipedia's policies like notability and reliable source
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* Criteria for acceptable questions on Stack Exchange sites
  
 
==Examples of symmetric institutions==
 
==Examples of symmetric institutions==

Revision as of 01:34, 23 December 2020

An asymmetric institution is an institution or mechanism which gives influence asymmetrically based on some property.

What is interesting about asymmetric institutions is that (1) they selectively give influence to those with particular qualities, and (2) they constrain the influence one can gain from/within that institution to only be usable in certain ways.

Examples of asymmetric institutions

  • science: gives status/influence to researchers who generate hypotheses that third parties can replicate; this means that most people's pet theories do not be promoted by science
  • betting:
  • debate (of the civil/rational kind, not a shouting match):
  • charity evaluation based on some strict criteria: GiveWell gains influence by evaluating charities, but it cannot promote any charity it wishes; it can only promote e.g. charities whose interventions perform well under a randomized controlled trial
  • Wikipedia's policies like notability and reliable source
  • Criteria for acceptable questions on Stack Exchange sites

Examples of symmetric institutions

Symmetric institutions/weapons have the property that the effectiveness does not depend on who is using it (although there are things like offense vs defense issues).

  • violence
  • shouting match
  • spreading viral content
  • persuasion tactics
  • info warfare

Concerns

Even asymmetric institutions aren't that good. Some thoughts here:

  • lots of low hanging fruit remain unpicked / inability to resolve coordination failures (e.g. look at all of the criticisms of science in recent years)
  • even asymmetric institutions can be corrupted
  • halo effect to areas where these institutions don't have expertise

External links