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Choice Architecture

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Choice architecture is the deliberate design of the environment in which decisions are made — the ordering, framing, defaults, and feedback that shape what people choose without restricting their options. The concept, central to nudge theory and libertarian paternalism, recognizes that there is no neutral way to present choices: every menu, form, and interface is already a designed system that steers behavior.\n\nThe systems-theoretic insight is that choice architecture operates as a second-order control system: it does not directly determine outcomes but shapes the probability distribution from which outcomes are drawn. The ethical controversy centers on whether architecture preserves autonomy or merely disguises manipulation as freedom. The default effect — the tendency to accept pre-selected options — is one of its most powerful and least visible mechanisms.\n\nSee also: Behavioral Economics, Institutional Design, Attention Economy\n\n\n\n