Misconceptions About Nudges by Cass Sunstein :: SSRN

peter.suber's bookmarks 2017-12-09

Summary:

Abstract:  Some people believe that nudges are an insult to human agency; that nudges are based on excessive trust in government; that nudges are covert; that nudges are manipulative; that nudges exploit behavioral biases; that nudges depend on a belief that human beings are irrational; and that nudges work only at the margins and cannot accomplish much. These are misconceptions. Nudges always respect, and often promote, human agency; because nudges insist on preserving freedom of choice, they do not put excessive trust in government; nudges are generally transparent rather than covert or forms of manipulation; many nudges are educative, and even when they are not, they tend to make life simpler and more navigable; and some nudges have quite large impacts.

Link:

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3033101

From feeds:

Consent and coercion » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

consent paternalism nudges paternalism.libertarian

Date tagged:

12/09/2017, 11:34

Date published:

12/09/2017, 10:10