Linguistique de l’écrit

Revue internationale en libre accès

Revue | Volume | Article

235298

To specialize or to innovate?

an internalist account of pluralistic ignorance in economics

Rogier De Langhe

pp. 2499-2511

Résumé

Academic and corporate research departments alike face a crucial dilemma: to exploit known frameworks or to explore new ones; to specialize or to innovate? Here I show that these two conflicting epistemic desiderata are sufficient to explain pluralistic ignorance and its boom-and-bust-like dynamics, exemplified in the collapse of the efficient markets hypothesis as a modern risk management paradigm in 2007. The internalist nature of this result, together with its robustness, suggests that pluralistic ignorance is an inherent feature rather than a threat to the rationality of epistemic communities.

Détails de la publication

Publié dans:

Zenker Frank, Proietti Carlo (2014) Social dynamics and collective rationality. Synthese 191 (11).

Pages: 2499-2511

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-014-0436-z

Citation complète:

De Langhe Rogier, 2014, To specialize or to innovate?: an internalist account of pluralistic ignorance in economics. Synthese 191 (11), Social dynamics and collective rationality, 2499-2511. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-014-0436-z.