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d-19588House OversightOther

Generic commentary on institutional theory, human societies, and academic incentives

The text contains no specific allegations, names, transactions, dates, or actionable leads involving powerful actors. It is a broad philosophical discussion without concrete investigative value. Discusses voting inequality and influence of money in politics. Raises questions about a unifying theory of human societies. Critiques perverse incentives in academic publishing.

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #028975
Pages
1
Persons
4
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The text contains no specific allegations, names, transactions, dates, or actionable leads involving powerful actors. It is a broad philosophical discussion without concrete investigative value. Discusses voting inequality and influence of money in politics. Raises questions about a unifying theory of human societies. Critiques perverse incentives in academic publishing.

Tags

philosophy-of-sciencepolitical-theoryinstitutional-analysisacademic-publishinghouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
We have one vote per person, but everyone knows dollars can buy more votes, and voters in small states are better represented than those in large states. Whose interests are being served and why theirs? Many economists and political scientists have thought about "optimal institutions." And much comparative and historical work has been done. But there isn't really a good unified theory of how these evolve, what characteristics are likely to emerge, and in what ways they are or are not optimal. 4) Is there a fundamental theory of human societies that's analogous to Darwin's theory in biology? Can that framework be as well supported by evidence and as simple as natural selection in biology, that will likewise explain the interesting things humans do, like, and believe, and the institutions we construct? Evolutionary psychologists think this doesn't require a new theory, just an investigation of the mind that biologically evolved on the Savannah. Others like Dawkins have suggested that we are best understood as machines infested by viruses of the mind which themselves evolve to take advantage of our evolved psychology. Anthropologists treat culture as just random inputs. Social psychologists document the funny quirks of our behavior without explaining where they come from. And economists assume people optimize given their tastes and beliefs but take those as given. Is one of these the right theory, if not is there a more compelling theory out there? What will it look like? How will we find it? How will we know we have found it, when we have? 5) How can we fix the perverse incentives in academia? Researchers get hired and promoted for publishing in top journals. Journal publication is determined by editors and referees. The best way to publish is to make sure your allies are the referees, cite their work, and don't step on their toes, and to convince the editor you are famous enough and your work is flashy enough that it will be well cited and get covered by the nytimes. None of this requires much attention be paid to truth, insight, or originally. Arguably, this is why the social sciences are such a mess. Few bother to incorporate evidence or arguments from outsiders (e.g., social psychologists don’t consult historians, economists barely consult social psychologists). Few bother to question the fundamental assumptions driving their field that make no sense and go unchecked (e.g., anthropologists treat culture as random inputs). And many researchers end up spending their whole careers developing and propagating theories that are completely uninteresting to outsiders, or obviously fallacious to anyone not steeped in their literature. It is ridiculous that we’re still using a system derived from the Society of Letters of the 1500s. Perhaps it's time for something more like Wikipedia, where information gets aggregated and contributors are incentivizes by their reputation as competent editors to integrate information from across disciplines? Or something like Reddit, where quality research is recognized by upvotes that aggregate the opinion of thousands from diverse fields? Or a certification system of sorts, where papers are certified as having done their statistics right or having integrated what's known from certain fields, or not citing irrelevant papers for political reasons? Whatever the solution is, social scientists and engineers who work on this problem will have orders of magnitude more impact on science than scientists doing primary research in our archaic system.

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