Preference falsification

The idea of preference falsification was put forth by the social scientist Timur Kuran in his book Private Truth, Public Lies as part of his theory of how people's stated preferences are responsive to social influences. It laid the foundation for his theory of why unanticipated revolutions can occur. It is related to ideas of social proof as well as choice blindness. The theory states that individuals convey preferences that differ from what they genuinely want.

Original formulation

According to the theory, in articulating preferences, individuals frequently tailor their choices to what appears socially acceptable. In other words, they convey preferences that differ from what they genuinely want. Kuran calls the resulting misrepresentation “preference falsification.” In his 1995 book, Private Truths, Public Lies, he argues that the phenomenon is ubiquitous and that it has huge social and political consequences. These consequences all hinge on interdependencies between individual decisions as to what preference to convey publicly. A person who hides his discontent about a fashion, policy, or political regime makes it harder for others to express discontent.

One socially significant consequence of preference falsification is widespread public support for social options that would be rejected decisively in a vote taken by secret ballot. Privately unpopular policies may be retained indefinitely as people reproduce conformist social pressures through individual acts of preference falsification.

In falsifying preferences, people hide the knowledge on which it rests. In the process, they distort, corrupt, and impoverish the knowledge in the public domain. They make it harder for others to become informed about the drawbacks of existing arrangements and the merits of their alternatives. Another consequence of preference falsification is thus widespread ignorance about the advantages of change. Over long periods, preference falsification can dampen a community’s capacity to want change by bringing about intellectual narrowness and ossification.

The first of these consequences is driven by people’s need for social approval, the second by their reliance on each other for information.

Kuran has applied these observations to a range of contexts. He has used the theory developed in Private Truths, Public Lies to explain why major political revolutions catch us by surprise, how ethnic tensions can feed on themselves, why India’s caste system has been a powerful social force for millennia, and why minor risks sometimes generate mass hysteria.[1]

Academic research

Kuran has published a number of papers on the themes of preference falsification (his book Private Truth, Public Lies is based on these papers).[2]

The idea of preference falsification has been studied by a number of social scientists. Economist Robert H. Frank reviewed Timur Kuran's book and offered his own thoughts on the political economy of preference falsification.[3] William Davis considered preference falsification within the economics profession.[4]

Reception

Economist and libertarian blogger Bryan Caplan, in a blog post for EconLog, applied the theory of preference falsification to explain some of the strong pushback he had received from others for his controversial blog posts on the subject of women's freedom in the late 19th century United States.[5] Political scientist and blogger John Hickman, in a column for Like the Dew, applied the theory to explain the euphemisms by military services.[6]

See also

References

  1. Kuran, Timur, Private Truths, Public Lies, (Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press, 1995).
  2. Kuran, Timur. "Preference Falsification, Policy Continuity and Collective Conservatism". JSTOR 10.2307/2232928.
  3. Frank, Robert. "The Political Economy of Preference Falsification". JSTOR 2729412.
  4. Davis, William. "Preference Falsification in the Economics Profession". Retrieved 2013-01-30.
  5. Caplan, Bryan (2010-04-17). "Preference Falsification: A Case Study". EconLog. Retrieved 2013-01-30.
  6. Hickman, John (2014-04-17). "Why the New Guantanamo Hunger Strike Euphemisms?". Like the Dew. Retrieved 2014-04-17.
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