In
individual knowledge, A knows X and B
knows X. In mutual knowledge A knows X, B
knows X, A knows that B knows X; B knows
and A knows X; A knows that B knows that
A knows X ad infinitum. And this is a
difference that has profound consequences.
For example, why is freedom of
assembly enshrined as a fundamental right in
a democracy and why are political
revolutions often triggered when a crowd
gathers in a public square to challenge the
president in his palace. Well it is because
when people were at home everyone knew
that they loathed the dictator, but no-one
knew that other people knew that other
people knew that they knew.
Once you assemble in a place where
everyone can see everyone else everyone
knows that everyone else knows that
everyone else knows that the dictator is
loathed, and that gives them the collective
power to challenge the authority of the
dictator who otherwise could kick off
dissenters one at a time.
This suggests that protests may lead to something in a particular case when most people already have individual knowledge, but they do not have mutual knowledge yet. For example, suppose those people really care about some issue and have idea what to do, then if participating in protests is risky, that signals that all those protesters are willing to take risks in order to achieve their goal (curiously, in this particular case, if protesting is safe (as it is in most Western countries), the signal might be less clear). This way individual knowledge becomes mutual knowledge. So if it is the lack of mutual knowledge that prevents their goals from being achieved, then protests might help. Otherwise, if it is something else that prevents solution (e.g.lack of idea how to solve a problem, various game theoretic (or coordination) problems that are not solved by going from individual to mutual knowledge, etc.) from being achieved, they are probably much more likely to be useless.
According to Stephen Pinker, protests can turn individual knowledge into mutual knowledge
This suggests that protests may lead to something in a particular case when most people already have individual knowledge, but they do not have mutual knowledge yet. For example, suppose those people really care about some issue and have idea what to do, then if participating in protests is risky, that signals that all those protesters are willing to take risks in order to achieve their goal (curiously, in this particular case, if protesting is safe (as it is in most Western countries), the signal might be less clear). This way individual knowledge becomes mutual knowledge. So if it is the lack of mutual knowledge that prevents their goals from being achieved, then protests might help. Otherwise, if it is something else that prevents solution (e.g.lack of idea how to solve a problem, various game theoretic (or coordination) problems that are not solved by going from individual to mutual knowledge, etc.) from being achieved, they are probably much more likely to be useless.