[EM] Markus, 16 March, '05, 0650 GMT
MIKE OSSIPOFF
nkklrp at hotmail.com
Tue Mar 15 22:46:14 PST 2005
Markus--
You said:
Well, you wrote that a candidate B is "majority rejected"
when there is another candidate A such that a majority of
the voters strictly prefers candidate A to candidate B.
I reply:
No, that wasn't how I defined "majority-rejected". I spoke of voting, not
preference.
You continued:
You wrote that the used election method shouldn't
unnecessarily elect a "majority rejected" candidate. This
criterion led to election methods like MinMax(winning votes)
or RMDD.
I reply:
Not quite. The criterion that led to RMDD didn't contain the word
"unnecessarily".
When I defined RMDD, last summer, I was looking for a method that met the
following criterion:
If a majority of the voters prefer X to Y and vote sincerely, then Y
shouldn't win.
So the criterion that led to RMDD was actually quite different from the one
that you mis-stated above. As I said, that would be a desirable criterion if
it could be met without too high a price. But that criterion, the strongest
majority defensive strategy criterion, can only be met by a significant
sacrifice of decisiveness.
You continued:
But it cannot be said that with this criterion
you "proposed wv as a general class of methods".
I reply:
Of course not, and I'm not claiming that I proposed wv with that criterion.
I proposed wv years before I defined GMC. I justified wv in terms of its
strategy advantages, as measured by criteria that, as I said, were early
versionis of SFC, WDSC, and SDSC.
Mike Ossipoff
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