[EM] Does MAM use the Copeland method?
Paul Kislanko
kislanko at airmail.net
Wed Oct 6 13:50:34 PDT 2004
I KNOW most pairwise methods elect A in this example. But pairwise A loses
to C by a majority, so why do the methods elect A?
> -----Original Message-----
> From: election-methods-electorama.com-bounces at electorama.com
> [mailto:election-methods-electorama.com-bounces at electorama.com
> ] On Behalf Of Steve Eppley
> Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2004 3:46 PM
> To: election-methods at electorama.com
> Subject: RE: [EM] Does MAM use the Copeland method?
>
> Hi,
>
> Paul K wrote:
> > Any argument that begins with "perhaps they..." is a
> speculation, not
> > an argument. From the ballots, 55.555556 percent of the voters
> > preferred a candidate that was not elected.
>
> But that's what I'd pointed out: All we know is that they
> _preferred_ a defeated candidate. Paul had claimed they were
> also _unhappy_ and I gave a reason why they might not be
> unhappy. The burden is on Paul to explain why he claimed
> they'd be unhappy.
>
> I prefer Milky Way candy bars over Three Musketeers, but it
> won't make me unhappy to be given a Three Musketeers bar.
>
> In a separate message, Paul also wrote:
> > For the same set of ballots, pairwise comparisons result in a
> > different winner based upon which voting method is
> employed. So which
> > one you use is an article of faith, not reason.
>
> Most pairwise methods elect A in that example. Copeland is
> the only pairwise method I know that doesn't, and it returns
> a 3-way tie. Copeland//Plurality, the method advocated by
> Bruce Anderson--the only member of this list who, to my
> knowledge, ever advocated any variation of Copeland--also elects A.
>
> Assuming Paul had his argument straight, that is, if he'd
> cited an example where good pairwise methods do pick
> different winners, his conclusion that which one of these
> methods to use is an article of faith rather than reason
> makes some sense to me, given that we cannot empirically
> determine which method is best. We can only make educated
> guesses based on speculative arguments, and see which of
> these arguments resonates with enough people to convince them
> to give the method a try.
>
> In yet another message, Paul called it the Borda method to
> use graded ballots such as A+, A, A-, B+, etc. He's made so
> many odd claims today, I must request he send me some of
> whatever he's been imbibing.
>
> --Steve
>
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