
The Majority Myth: How Voting Really Works And Why Elections Must Change - Paperback
The Majority Myth: How Voting Really Works And Why Elections Must Change - Paperback
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by Edmund Lewis Maklouf (Author)
What if everything you thought you knew about voting was wrong?
We treat the ballot as democracy's gold standard - a neutral counting device that transforms individual preferences into collective will. But what if that's a myth? In The Majority Myth, political philosopher Edmund Lewis Maklouf dismantles one of modern society's most cherished assumptions: that when 51% of people vote for something, something meaningful has been determined.
Drawing on evolutionary biology, social psychology, political history, and anthropology, Maklouf traces the true origins of voting - not to ancient Greece, as the standard story goes, but to the herding behaviours of animals, the rituals of isolated tribes, and the ceremonial elections of institutions like the papal conclave. Along the way, he reveals that voting's primary job has never been to measure preferences with precision. It has always been to transform a dangerous moment of potential fracture into a shared decision event.
Moving from Brexit to Bleeding Kansas, from rainforest tribes to papal smoke signals, from mafia voting scenes to the mathematics of fairness, The Majority Myth shows how ballots, referendums, and organisational votes work less like rational mechanisms and more like carefully staged performances of consent. The 50% threshold, Maklouf argues, is not a mathematical truth - it is a ritual line we make sacred.
But this is not a counsel of despair. The final chapters sketch six possible futures for voting - novel decision rituals that are honest about how groups really choose, and that might open new paths to genuine political agreement.
The Majority Myth will change the way you see every election, referendum, and show of hands - forever.
Topics covered include: the evolutionary roots of collective decision-making - animal herd constitutions - the invention of democracy vs. the invention of voting - the psychology of majority thresholds - ritual and ceremony in political life - the papal conclave - the Catalan independence referendum - randomness and fairness - the future of democratic participation



















