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Towards scalable governance

sensemaking and cooperation in the age of social media

Iyad Rahwan

pp. 161-178

Cybernetics, or self-governance of animal and machine, requires the ability to sense the world and to act on it in an appropriate manner. Likewise, self-governance of a human society requires groups of people to collectively sense and act on their environment. I argue that the evolution of political systems is characterized by a series of innovations that attempt to solve (among others) two 'scalability" problems: scaling up a group's ability to make sense of an increasingly complex world, and to cooperate in increasingly larger groups. I then explore some recent efforts toward using the Internet and social media to provide alternative means for addressing these scalability challenges, under the banners of crowdsourcing and computer-supported argumentation. I present some lessons from those efforts about the limits of technology, and the research directions more likely to bear fruit.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s13347-016-0246-y

Full citation:

Rahwan, I. (2017). Towards scalable governance: sensemaking and cooperation in the age of social media. Philosophy & Technology 30 (2), pp. 161-178.

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