teleo-codex/core/mechanisms/blind meritocratic voting forces independent thinking by hiding interim results while showing engagement.md
m3taversal e830fe4c5f Initial commit: Teleo Codex v1
Three-agent knowledge base (Leo, Rio, Clay) with:
- 177 claim files across core/ and foundations/
- 38 domain claims in internet-finance/
- 22 domain claims in entertainment/
- Agent soul documents (identity, beliefs, reasoning, skills)
- 14 positions across 3 agents
- Claim/belief/position schemas
- 6 shared skills
- Agent-facing CLAUDE.md operating manual

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-05 20:30:34 +00:00

3.8 KiB

description type domain created confidence source
Concealing vote tallies while displaying participation levels reduces groupthink and anchoring bias, with reputation-weighted votes rewarding consistently good judgment over popularity claim livingip 2026-02-16 likely Governance - Meritocratic Voting + Futarchy

blind meritocratic voting forces independent thinking by hiding interim results while showing engagement

Traditional voting systems suffer from a fundamental flaw: visible interim results create anchoring effects and cascade behavior. Once participants see which option is winning, they tend to pile on rather than think independently. This is the groupthink problem -- the very mechanism designed to aggregate diverse perspectives ends up homogenizing them.

Blind meritocratic voting solves this by separating two kinds of information. Engagement levels remain visible -- participants can see that others are voting, which maintains social proof and urgency. But the direction of votes is hidden until the process completes. This forces each participant to form their own judgment without anchoring to the crowd. Since collective intelligence requires diversity as a structural precondition not a moral preference, blind voting preserves the diversity of perspectives that makes collective decisions valuable in the first place.

The meritocratic layer adds a second innovation: vote weight is determined by reputation earned through consistently good decision-making. This is not plutocracy (wealth-weighted) or pure democracy (equal-weighted) but something closer to epistocracy calibrated by track record. Influence must be earned through demonstrated judgment, not purchased or inherited. Combined with the blindness mechanism, this creates a system where independent thinkers with good track records have the most influence -- exactly the distribution you want for high-quality collective decisions.


Relevant Notes:

Topics: