[EM] information content of ballots (and intelligent people)
Dave Ketchum
davek at clarityconnect.com
Sun Jun 7 14:58:38 PDT 2009
It matters what is said, not whether speaking in different languages
affects whether different information can be contained in the same
size statement.
Paul is stating, correctly, that reading a ballot that only approves
{B C} provides no information as to the voter's desires being B>C,
B=C, or B<C - only preferring them over A.
On Jun 7, 2009, at 2:57 PM, Jan Kok wrote:
> I understand quite well Warren's point that for 2 and 3-candidate
> races, and with full ranking required, and equal ranking not allowed,
> then Approval (with the "silly" votes excluded) and ranked ballots can
> be encoded in the same number of bits. And yes, there is certainly an
> algorithm for turning a binary number like 100 back into a ranking. Or
> for turning an 8-bit number into 3 Approval or 3 ranked ballots.
>
> In his most recent post to EM, Paul wrote:
>
>> If "ranked ballots provide more information than approval ballots"
>> is a
>> MYTH, then Mr. Smith should be able to decide from {B C} > {A} which
>> of {C B} is preferred by the approval voter over the other.
>
> In other words, Paul is saying that the ranked ballot "B>C>A" contains
> some information (namely B>C) that is not contained in the Approval
> ballot "{B,C} are approved".
>
> I think the answer to this seeming paradox is that the ranked and
> Approval ballots contain the same amount but _different kinds_ of
> information. In fact the Approval ballot contains information that can
> not be determined from the ranked ballot: in the above example, can
> you tell from the ranked ballot whether C would be "approved" by the
> voter? ("Approved" meaning the voter considers C to be better than the
> outcome expected if A and B were the only candidates.)
Paradox? (ignoring Jan's naming error), Paul's approval ballot is
approving {B C} as if equally liked, and unable to imitate rank's
ability to include relative liking of the two.
The approval voter had to omit voting for A to indicate lesser liking
for A, while the rank voter could indicate lesser liking for A in the
ranking.
>
> To state it more simply: does the voter like C a lot or not much at
> all, compared to the likely winners? You can't tell from the ranked
> ballot. The Approval ballot at least gives you a hint.
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