Agree with this. I haven’t read those books, but I know that Public Choice III also contains 100> pages of thorough discussion about how the choice of a voting system influences the way that preferences get aggregated under those systems. Something like that seems like a must-read for Friendliness researchers.
Agree with this. I haven’t read those books, but I know that Public Choice III also contains 100> pages of thorough discussion about how the choice of a voting system influences the way that preferences get aggregated under those systems. Something like that seems like a must-read for Friendliness researchers.