[EM] Chicken Dilemma Criterion definition

Michael Ossipoff email9648742 at gmail.com
Thu Oct 17 09:02:32 PDT 2013


 Markus--

Here is my electowiki definition of the Chicken Dilemma Criterion.


Chicken Dilemma Criterion

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Definition

Supporting definitions:

1. The A voters are the voters who prefer candidate A to everyone
else. The B voters are the voters who prefer candidate B to everyone
else.

2. The "other candidates" are the candidates other than A and B.

3. A particular voter votes sincerely if s/he doesn't falsify a
preference, or fail to vote a felt preference that the balloting
system in use would have allowed hir to vote in addition to the
preferences that s/he actually votes.

Premise:

1. The A voters and the B voters, combined, add up to more than half
of the voters in the election.

2. The A voters and the B voters all prefer both A and B to the other
candidates.

3. The A voters are more numerous than are the B voters.

4. Voting is sincere, except that the B voters refuse to vote A over anyone.

5. Candidate A would be the unique winner under sincere voting (...in
other words, if the B voters voted sincerely, as do all the other
voters).

Requirement:

B doesn't win.

[end of CD definition]


________________________________

In the chicken dilemma scenario described in the premise of the
Chicken Dilemma Criterion (CD) defined above, if B won, then the B
voters would have successfully taken advantage of the A voters'
co-operativeness. The A voters wanted to vote both A and B over the
candidates disliked by both the A voters and B voters. Thereby they
helped {A,B} against worse candidates. But, with methods that fail CD,
the message is "You help, you lose".

________________________________

Some methods that pass the Chicken Dilemma Criterion:

ICT, Symmetrical ICT, MMPO, MDDTR

[to which I now add IRV, Benham, and Woodall]



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