The doctrinal paradox and the mixed-motivation problem

Analysis 66 (1):35-39 (2006)
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Abstract

There are two seemingly unrelated paradoxes of democracy. The older one is the doctrinal paradox or the discursive dilemma. or a comprehensive bibliography, see List 1995. The younger one is the mixed motivation problem introduced by Jonathan Wolff (1994) in this journal. In the mixed motivation problem, we have voters with mixed Benthamite and Rousseauian motivations who reach a majority on an issue that is neither in the self-interest of a majority of the voters, nor considered to be conducive to the common good by a majority of the voters. What has gone unnoticed so far is that both of these paradoxes share a common structure.

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Luc Bovens
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

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