Joe Soltzberg

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In 1785 he wrote, rather forlornly, “We cannot usually avoid being presented with decisions of this kind, which we might call equivocal, except by requiring a large plurality or allowing only very enlightened men to vote. . . . If we cannot find voters who are sufficiently enlightened, we must avoid making a bad choice by accepting as candidates only those men in whose competence we can trust.”
How Not to Be Wrong: The Power of Mathematical Thinking
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