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Dive into the research topics where Kai Spiekermann is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kai Spiekermann.


American Political Science Review | 2013

Methodological Individualism and Holism in Political Science: A Reconciliation

Christian List; Kai Spiekermann

Political science is divided between methodological individualists, who seek to explain political phenomena by reference to individuals and their interactions, and holists (or nonreductionists), who consider some higher-level social entities or properties such as states, institutions, or cultures ontologically or causally significant. We propose a reconciliation between these two perspectives, building on related work in philosophy. After laying out a taxonomy of different variants of each view, we observe that (i) although political phenomena result from underlying individual attitudes and behavior, individual-level descriptions do not always capture all explanatorily salient properties, and (ii) nonreductionistic explanations are mandated when social regularities are robust to changes in their individual-level realization. We characterize the dividing line between phenomena requiring nonreductionistic explanation and phenomena permitting individualistic explanation and give examples from the study of ethnic conflicts, social-network theory, and international-relations theory.


Synthese | 2009

Sort out your neighbourhood Public good games on dynamic networks

Kai Spiekermann

Axelrod (The evolution of cooperation, 1984) and others explain how cooperation can emerge in repeated 2-person prisoner’s dilemmas. But in public good games with anonymous contributions, we expect a breakdown of cooperation because direct reciprocity fails. However, if agents are situated in a social network determining which agents interact, and if they can influence the network, then cooperation can be a viable strategy. Social networks are modelled as graphs. Agents play public good games with their neighbours. After each game, they can terminate connections to others, and new connections are created. Cooperative agents do well because they manage to cluster with cooperators and avoid defectors. Computer simulations demonstrate that group formation and exclusion are powerful mechanisms to promote cooperation in dilemma situations. This explains why social dilemmas can often be solved if agents can choose with whom they interact.


European Political Science | 2012

Epistemic aspects of representative government

Robert E. Goodin; Kai Spiekermann

The Federalist, justifying the Electoral College to elect the president, claimed that a small group of more informed individuals would make a better decision than the general mass. But the Condorcet Jury Theorem tells us that the more independent, better-than-random voters there are, the more likely it will be that the majority among them will be correct. The question thus arises as to how much better, on average, members of the smaller group would have to be to compensate for the epistemic costs of making decisions on the basis of that many fewer votes. This question is explored in the contexts of referendum democracy, delegate-style representative democracy, and trustee-style representative democracy.


Ai & Society | 2010

Judgement aggregation and distributed thinking

Kai Spiekermann

In recent years, judgement aggregation has emerged as an important area of social choice theory. Judgement aggregation is concerned with aggregating sets of individual judgements over logically connected propositions into a set of collective judgements. It has been shown that even seemingly weak conditions on the aggregation function make it impossible to find functions that produce rational collective judgements from all possible rational individual judgements. This implies that the step from individual judgements to collective judgements requires trade-offs between different desiderata, such as universal domain, rationality, epistemological quality, and unbiasedness. The typical application for judgement aggregation is the problem of group decision making. Juries and expert committees are the stock examples. However, the relevance of judgement aggregation goes beyond these cases. In this survey, I review some core results in the field of judgement aggregation and social epistemology and discuss their implications for the analysis of distributed thinking.


Economics and Philosophy | 2013

Epistemic democracy with defensible premises

Franz Dietrich; Kai Spiekermann


Mind | 2013

Independent Opinions? On the Causal Foundations of Belief Formation and Jury Theorems

Franz Dietrich; Kai Spiekermann


Politics, Philosophy & Economics | 2007

Translucency, assortation, and information pooling: how groups solve social dilemmas

Kai Spiekermann


Political Studies | 2014

Buying Low, Flying High: Carbon Offsets and Partial Compliance

Kai Spiekermann


Archive | 2013

Objective and subjective compliance: how 'moral wiggle room' opens

Kai Spiekermann; Arne Weiss


Archive | 2008

Norms and games : realistic moral theory and the dynamic analysis of cooperation

Kai Spiekermann

Collaboration


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Robert E. Goodin

Australian National University

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Franz Dietrich

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Christian List

London School of Economics and Political Science

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Franz Dietrich

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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