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---
id: 2026-04-06T16:47:44-04:00
aliases: []
title: 2026-04-06 16:47:44
tags:
- authorship/original
- destiny/permanent
- status/draft
- type/periodic/timestamped
dg-publish: true
date-created: 2026-04-06T16:47:44-04:00
daily: "[[2026-04-06]]"
weekly: "[[2026-W15]]"
monthly: "[[2026-04]]"
quarterly: "[[2026-Q2]]"
yearly: "[[2026]]"
---
# 2026-04-06 16:47:44
## Nirvana Fallacy
The [nirvana fallacy](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nirvana_fallacy)
also called the "perfect solution fallacy"
is the mistake made when a solution proposed to replace one existing
is judged against a hypothetical perfect solution
rather than the solution in current use.
> [!quote] Harold Demsetz "Information and Efficiency: Another Viewpoint" (1969)[^1]
> The view that now pervades much public policy economics
> implicitly presents the relevant choice
> as between an ideal norm and an existing "imperfect" institutional arrangement.
> This _nirvana_ approach differs considerably
> from a _comparative institution_ approach
> in which the relevant choice is between alternative real institutional arrangements.
[^1]: Harold Demsetz
"Information and Efficiency: Another Viewpoint"
_The Journal of Law and Economics_
Volume 12, Number 1
(April 1969)
[doi:10.1086/466657](https://doi.org/10.1086%2F466657)
The "_[[the-failure-of-risk-management#_Exsupero Ursus_|exsupero ursus]]_ fallacy"
as coined by Douglas Hubbard in [[hubbard_2020_failure]][^2]
describes the same problem.
[^2]: Or earlier? I can't recall.