[EM] replies to Ossipoff re Range Voting; explanation of latest RV results
Abd ul-Rahman Lomax
abd at lomaxdesign.com
Sun Feb 11 22:52:33 PST 2007
At 12:41 PM 2/10/2007, Warren Smith wrote:
> >WDS: In IEVS, presently, equal rankings are forbidden in rank-order methods.
> >MO: which (like Warren's other assumptions) makes the results meaningless.
>
>--WDS: While I agree it would be nice if IEVS did equal rankings,
>and I plan to make
>a future version do that,
>(a) I do not agree I ever made any "assumption" here.
>I simply described the status of IEVS. I did not "make an assumption."
>(b) I do not agree every result in the universe that concerns rank
>order voting methods
>is "meaningless."
I have a policy of not replying directly to Ossipoff, there is a
history of endless debate that turns over details of "you said," and
"I said," endless argument that goes nowhere.
Here Warren noted in his post that IEVS did not presently allow equal
rankings. He was listing this as a shortcoming of IEVS. Ossipoff
apparently turned this into an assumption that there was something
defective about equal rankings. Warren is correct. He simply
described the status of IEVS, which has not yet been programmed to
allow equal rankings in ranked methods.
The charge that his results are therefore "meaningless" is, well,
silly. Many implementations of ranked methods don't allow equal
ranking, in the real world. Yes, as Ossipoff points out, most of us
would prefer equal ranking (which actually turns ranked methods into
something closer to Range, or at least to Approval). But programming
equal ranking is trickier, if you are using issue space analysis to
determine votes. At what level of preference do you decide to rank
equally? Or what other factors influence the use of equal ranking? It
is actually a *lot* more complex.
And, yes, it is necessary for Warren's results to have wider
application. But they are not at all "meaningless" as they stand.
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