[EM] 02/04/02 - Approval is only for Beauty Contests:

Forest Simmons fsimmons at pcc.edu
Tue Feb 5 10:03:25 PST 2002



On Mon, 4 Feb 2002, Richard Moore wrote:

> 
> In beauty contests, or in judged athletic competitions (e.g. gymnastics,
> skating, diving), where (presumably) the voters have no vested interested
> in the outcome (other than their reputation as judges), CR and Borda both
> can be expected to work well, because the ratings or rankings given by the
> judges will be honest. The finer gradations of Borda and especially CR are
> important in such contests, so until Donald presents his theorem we should
> not accept his second statement, that Approval "should be used in any
> election in which the `winner to be' is not important to most of the voters.
> 
> For contests where the voters have a real stake in the outcome, however,
> you can expect the voters in a Borda system to sometimes rank candidates
> insincerely, and you can expect the voters in a CR system to give each
> candidate either the lowest or highest rating (equivalent to their vote
> under Approval).
> 
> In such contests, Approval does have a powerful compromise-seeking tendency
> (a tendency that is of little or no value in the case of impartial judges).
> Each voter goes into the election with a certain expectation of utility for
> the outcome. Each voter will then approve every candidate that has a higher
> utility for that voter than that voter's expectation, and disapprove every
> other candidate. This is basic Approval strategy. Most people who have been
> reading this list for a while are familiar with the zero-information form
> of this, wherein each voter votes for the candidates with greater than
> average utility for that voter.
> 
> What the voter is saying with his/her ballot, then, is "These are the
> candidates I would willingly accept, since any of them would be a better
> result for me than I would normally expect in the current political climate.
> They might not all be my ideal candidate, but I am willing to compromise
> by accepting any of them as the winner."
> 
> The actual winner will be the candidate who is viewed as an acceptable
> compromise by the largest number of voters. In other words, with the
> Approval winner, the smallest number of voters will walk away feeling like
> losers. So again, until Donald presents his theorem, we should not accept
> his first statement, that Approval "should never be used in any election
> in which the `winner to be' is important to most of the voters."
> 
>     -- Richard
> 

I like this succinct summary of why Approval is the "reliable hand tool"
in Mike's metaphor. 

It should be on the front page of somebody's website.

Forest



More information about the Election-Methods mailing list