[EM] Warren reply
Michael Ossipoff
mikeo2106 at msn.com
Tue Feb 20 04:50:30 PST 2007
I had said (with Warrens additions in brackets):
The CW [Condorcet winner] has everything to do with SU, because, when voting
is spatial, based
on distance in issue-space, the [honest voter] CW
I reply:
The CW is defined in terms of actual preferences, with no assumption about
anyones honesty.
Warren continues the quote:
is the SU maximizer every time if that
distance is measured as city-block distance.
If we instead use Pythagorean distance,
also called Euclidean distance, then the CW is always the SU maximizer
under such
commonly-assumed conditions as multidimensional normally distributed voters,
or uniformly distributed voters.
Warren says:
Intuitively satisfying?
However, as far as I can see, Ossipoff never proved either
part (i) or (ii) of this
I reply:
Forive me, but I dont know what parts 1 & 2 are. In years previous, I told
why, with city block distance a CW maximizes SU. Ill tell it again, later
in this reply.
CONJECTURE:
with utilities that are decreasing functions of L1 candidate-voter distances
for a set of N candidates distributed arbitrarily somehow in the space,
(i) there always exists a Condorcet winner, and further
(ii) it is always the max-summed-utility candidate.
I reply:
At no time did I say that, under any particular conditions, there is always
a CW. So hopefully it isnt necessary for me to prove part 1, which I never
claimed.
Warren continues:
Is either true?
I believe the following 2D picture constitutes a disproof of (i) and hence
also of (ii).
I reply:
Wrong. Disproving 1 doesnt disprove 2. Even if there isnt always a CW, it
could still be that the CW, when there is one, always maximizes SU.
If Warrens demonstration that, with city-block distance, the CW, when one
exists, doesnt always maximize SU consists of showing that there isnt
always a CW, then he is mistaken about the validity of his justification for
his claim.
Warren continues:
However, Ossipoff is correct that with L2 distance, the CW
always (i) exists
I reply:
Im glad thats correct, but I still didnt say it.
Now, why did I claim that, with city-block distance, a CW always maximizes
SU?
Say theres a candidate at the multidimensional median point. As Warren
said, s/he is the CW.
Starting from the CW, say we move some distance from the CW, in a direction
parallel to one of the axes by which we measure city-block distance. By
moving in that direction from the median candidate, were moving away, by
city-block distance, from the CW, and from everyone on the other side of the
CW--that entire half of the candidates who are on the other side of the CW,
in the dimension in which were moving. Of course were also moving away
from everyone whom weve passed while moving. Now, say, from there, we move
in direction perpendicular to the one in which we initially moved. Again, by
city-block distance, were moving away from the CW, and from the half of the
candidates who are on the other side of the CW, and from everyone whom weve
passed, in the dimension that were now moving. In both of those moves,
were moving away from more voters than were moving toward, by the same
distance.
Maybe that isnt rigorously-stated, and maybe, taking more time, I could
word it better. But it seems convincing.
Moving, away from more voters than were moving toward, by the same
distance, that can only increased summed distance, decreasing the SU of a
candidate at that new position.
Mike Ossipoff
More information about the Election-Methods
mailing list