Discussion about this post

User's avatar
James Hudson's avatar

You are assuming a clear distinction between facts (about what would happen under various circumstances) and values; but arguably the *goals* you list are mere *means* to what is ultimately valued. For example: *Stop global warming* is valued only because global warming is supposed to have various bad consequences. But would it really have those consequences (while not having unexpected good consequences that outweigh the bad)? That is the sort of question that should be put to the prediction markets.

Expand full comment
Ivan Vendrov's avatar

The surprising conclusion for me is that futarchy is some sense centralizing: because the markets for large-scale decisions will be more liquid, the quality of advice available to large orgs will be better than that for small orgs, so we will on net entrust more decisions to large orgs.

Curious how this interplays with your concerns about reduced cultural variation; seems like futarchy will by default both decrease the number of orgs and also hurt every org's ability to maintain a unique culture, because they will pay for it in reduced advice quality.

Expand full comment
6 more comments...

No posts