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Infotopia : How Many Minds Produce Knowledge

Infotopia : How Many Minds Produce Knowledge

Author: Cass R. Sunstein
Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
Publication Date: 10 Jul 2008
ISBN-13: 9780195340679
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Description


The rise of the "information society" offers not only considerable peril but also great promise. Beset from all sides by a never-ending barrage of media, how can we ensure that the most accurate information emerges and is heeded? In this book, Cass R. Sunstein develops a deeply optimistic understanding of the human potential to pool information, and to use that knowledge to improve our lives. In an age of information overload, it is easy to fall back on our own
prejudices and insulate ourselves with comforting opinions that reaffirm our core beliefs. Crowds quickly become mobs. The justification for the Iraq war, the collapse of Enron, the explosion of the space shuttle Columbia-all of these resulted from decisions made by leaders and groups trapped in
"information cocoons," shielded from information at odds with their preconceptions. How can leaders and ordinary people challenge insular decision making and gain access to the sum of human knowledge? Stunning new ways to share and aggregate information, many Internet-based, are helping companies, schools, governments, and individuals not only to acquire, but also to create, ever-growing bodies of accurate knowledge. Through a ceaseless flurry of self-correcting exchanges, wikis, covering
everything from politics and business plans to sports and science fiction subcultures, amass-and refine-information. Open-source software enables large numbers of people to participate in technological development. Prediction markets aggregate information in a way that allows companies, ranging from
computer manufacturers to Hollywood studios, to make better decisions about product launches and office openings. Sunstein shows how people can assimilate aggregated information without succumbing to the dangers of the herd mentality-and when and why the new aggregation techniques are so astoundingly accurate. In a world where opinion and anecdote increasingly compete on equal footing with hard evidence, the on-line effort of many minds coming together might well provide the best path to
infotopia.


Table of Contents


Preface to the paperback edition; ; Preface and Acknowledgments; ; Introduction: Dreams and Nightmares; ; Chapter 1: The (Occasional) Power of Numbers; ; Chapter 2: The Surprising Failures of Deliberating Groups; ; Chapter 3: Four Big Problems; ; Chapter 4: Money, Prices, and Prediction Markets; ; Chapter 5: Many Working Minds: Wikis, Open Source Software, and Blogs; ; Chapter 6: Implications and Reforms; ; Conclusion: Realizing Promises; ; Appendix: Prediction Markets


Author Description


Cass R. Sunstein is Karl N. Llewellyn Distinguished Service Professor of Jurisprudence at the University of Chicago Law School, a contributing editor at the New Republic and the American Prospect, and a frequent contributor as well to such publications as the New York Times and the Washington Post. He is the recipient of the Henderson Prize and the Goldsmith Book Prize; his many books include Radicals in Robes, Republic.com, Why Societies Need Dissent, and Designing
Democracy: What Constitutions Do.






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