[EM] New Criterion: The Co-operation/Defection Criterion
Kevin Venzke
stepjak at yahoo.fr
Wed Oct 26 11:09:48 PDT 2011
Hi Mike,
--- En date de : Mer 26.10.11, MIKE OSSIPOFF <nkklrp at hotmail.com> a écrit :
> Kevin--
>
> You wrote:
>
>
> I see this criterion in effect:
>
> If some candidate A has simple pairwise wins over every
> candidate in
> a set of candidates "B"...
>
> [endquote]
>
> There is only one candidate B. It would be nice if {A,B}
> could be replaced
> with a larger set of candidates, but the crierion would
> then probably be
> unattainable.
By allowing multiple "B" candidates, my criterion is stronger than
yours, and it is attainable.
> You wrote:
>
> As far as methods that will satisfy it, we at least have
> some clumsy
> ones. Any Condorcet method used to complete
> majority-defeat-
> disqualification or CDTT (i.e. Schwartz set that replaces
> sub-majority
> wins with ties) will do the trick. These methods would also
> satisfy
> SDSC fully.
>
> [endquote]
>
> Worth checking out. But, even if you're correct about that,
> how many of those methods
> meet FBC?
None of them satisfy FBC, but neither does your version of MMPO.
> Can those methods be shown to meet CD? Of course, the
> burden of proof, in the
> form of a failure example, is on the person claiming that
> they don't. ...because it's
> often easier to show noncompliance than compliance. But
> even so, what method other
> than MMPO can be shown to meet CD?
I am quite confident I can convince you that my above-listed methods
satisfy CD.
Try this method:
1. If possible, eliminate every candidate with a majority loss
2. If there is a CW among remaining candidates, elect him
3. Otherwise elect somebody arbitrarily (doesn't matter)
Isn't it pretty clear that this meets your criterion?
> You wrote:
>
> I am not sure that MMPO as you propose it actually does the
> trick.
> It seems to depend on the A-B tied score which I'm not sure
> is
>
> [endquote]
>
> The A-B tie is sure thing. It's obviously a sure thing if
> there is only one non {A,B}
> candidate.
> But, to preserve CD's similarity to the 3-candidate
> Approval bad-example, and CD's
> ability to disitinguish between methods, when there are
> more than
> one non {A,B} candidates, I said, in the criterion
> premise:
>
> "A majority prefer A and B to all the other candidates, and
> the rest of the voters prefer all
> the other candidates to A and B."
>
> So, A and B can't not be tied.
Okay, that's true. But this is a point where my version of the criterion
is stronger than yours.
Kevin
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