SOCIAL CHOICE THEORY, GAME THEORY, AND POSITIVE POLITICAL THEORY

Author:

Austen-Smith David1,Banks Jeffrey S.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Political Science, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208

2. Division of Humanities and Social Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125

Abstract

▪ Abstract  We consider the relationships between the collective preference and non-cooperative game theory approaches to positive political theory. In particular, we show that an apparently decisive difference between the two approaches—that in sufficiently complex environments (e.g. high-dimensional choice spaces) direct preference aggregation models are incapable of generating any prediction at all, whereas non-cooperative game-theoretic models almost always generate prediction—is indeed only an apparent difference. More generally, we argue that when modeling collective decisions there is a fundamental tension between insuring existence of well-defined predictions, a criterion of minimal democracy, and general applicability to complex environments; while any two of the three are compatible under either approach, neither collective preference nor non-cooperative game theory can support models that simultaneously satisfy all three desiderata.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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