Foundation for Better Government
August 6, 2014
Entropy in Democracy
T.S. Khanna, August 6, 2014
Entropy of a system is the measure of disorder dissipating energy without
productive application.
The system of democratic government is based on certain assumptions re
human behavior and social cohesion within the society. To the extent the actual human behavior does
not conform to the assumptions, there is disorder in the system causing entropy.
To understand the disorder, we need to revisit the assumptions re the
behavior of citizens and politicians.
Citizens are assumed to be responsible for fully comprehending political issues
and, as “part rulers”, make a rational, moral, and independent judgment to
promote the common good.
Elected officials are assumed to represent and integrate the local
interests for promoting the common good and the national interests.
However, in fact, neither citizens’ nor political leaders’ behavior
conforms to the assumptions. In
professionally managed and heavily funded campaigns, public image of candidates
is created to manipulate the gullible voters who do not have the time,
aptitude, or even the sense of obligation for a full comprehension of political
issues to make an independent rational judgment for the benefit of the whole
society. Only promotion of the very
personal interests draws the citizens to politics, for all else it is apathy.
Elected officials are usually beholden to the non-compromising private
interests.
The idea here is not to blame the human behavior but to urge the
political “Pundits” to modify the democratic system to bring it in synch with
the human behavior for better performance and minimal entropy.
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