Finding the probable best candidate?
Forest Simmons
fsimmons at pcc.edu
Wed Feb 20 20:14:31 PST 2002
On Wed, 20 Feb 2002, Blake Cretney wrote:
> By best candidate I really mean the best candidate. That is, the
> candidate that would provide the best government. The candidate we
> should hope the voters would elect.
I know what you mean, but it is useful to have something measureable to
maximize so that we can see how close we are to the ideal.
> Perhaps I could just define it as the winner of a plurality election?
> This is just defining the problem away.
But what does the plurality candidate maximize?
>
> To be fair, an argument can be made that finding the maximum utility
> candidate is a good way to get a best guess for best candidate.
Maximum average utility, or Maximum Minimum utility, or maximum utility
product, or ... ? there are infinitely many essentially different
possibilities.
> I
> disagree, but that argument can be made. I do think the point has to be
> argued though, not simply defined as true.
I have argued against candidate's utility averaged over voters and for
number of voters giving candidate above average utility (averaged over
candidates), as a more democratic measure of maximum utility candidate.
Actually I prefer to use "satisfaction" rather than "utility" because the
latter term has too many connotations of economics.
Forest
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