[EM] The election methods trade-off paradox/impossibility theorems paradox.
Brian Olson
bql at bolson.org
Thu Jun 22 13:31:19 PDT 2017
Compared to a rankings ballot, a ratings ballot contains more information
about a voter's preference or utility for the available choices.
I can say
A > B > C > D
or I can say with more detail
A = 1.0; B = 0.9; C = 0.1; D = 0.0
If there is more information available, it is possible for an election
algorithm to use that information and more accurately represent the voters
and find the greater global utility winner.
If we had a specially insightful rational bayesian voting populace we might
ask them for their confidence interval of how sure they are are about each
choice and get more information still.
A = 1.0 (e=.3); B = 0.9 (e=.1), C = 0.1 (e=0.5), D = 0.0 (e=0.1)
And then we'd work out an election algorithm to maximize the expected value
of the global utility over the known voter utility distributions.
On Thu, Jun 22, 2017 at 2:47 PM, Richard Lung <voting at ukscientists.com>
wrote:
>
> Brian Olson,
>
> Where we differ is that I do not see ranked choice as a constraint. Single
> order choice, the x-vote is the constraint on ranked voting as a
> multiple-order choice.
> The problem with election methods, practical and theoretical is that they
> impose constraints on the voters freedom of choice, in one way or another,
> and so are that much less true election methods.
> (A minor example, the classic objections to cumulative voting seem to
> apply to some apprently modern versions or variations.)
>
> When Condorcet and Borda, disagreed on the best way to conduct a count of
> preference voting, Laplace decided in favor of Borda. (I grant you that
> Condorcet has information value, when weighted. But I am not well informed
> on this approach and know of no convincing reason why it should be adopted
> or how you would persuade the public of that.) JFS Ross explained that
> Laplace favored Method Borda because higher preferences were more important
> and should count more. The Gregory method removes the objection to Borda of
> "later harm." This is the direction I have followed (weighted count of
> ranked choice), following on from where Meek method STV leaves off.
>
> Richard Lung
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On 22/06/2017 15:01, Brian Olson wrote:
>
> I kinda don't accept this paradox. Just to compare the form of a election
> method paradox statement: Arrow's theorem was that given a set of desired
> properties and the constraint of rankings ballots, those set of desirable
> properties could not all be simultaneously fulfilled. One can almost
> trivially step outside of that paradox by eliminating the constraint of the
> rankings ballot.
>
> My model of understanding people and elections is a utilitarian one. A
> person derives some amount of utility from the outcome of an election and
> everyone is apportioned the same share of utility which we might count as
> 0..1 or -1..1 . These model persons can be summed up and and a global
> social utility calculated. The ideal election method perfectly knows every
> person and elects the true global social utility maximizing candidate. This
> sounds an awful lot like score voting. But then we have to start to
> complicate the model with imperfect knowledge of a voter's utility, the
> imperfect expression of that on a ballot, strategic ballot casting rather
> than honest, messy computation and practical administration issues of
> running an election in the real world, and so on. So we might wind up with
> a best practical method that isn't just simple score voting.
>
> But I still believe there is a pragmatic 'best' method, we have techniques
> for evaluating that, and we should do this and put something up in the real
> world. Personally I'll take a rankings ballot that's Condorcet counted with
> any cycle resolution method as 'good enough' and practically applicable;
> and tinkering around the edges for a slightly better method is fun
> mathematical curiosity but I'd also like to get some laws passed.
>
> What do you think of my model statement?
> Is there a more formal statement of limitations you were heading towards?
>
>
> On Thu, Jun 22, 2017 at 2:30 AM, Richard Lung <voting at ukscientists.com>
> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> The election methods trade-off paradox/impossibility theorems paradox.
>>
>>
>> For the sake of argument, suppose a trade-off theory of elections that
>> there is no consistently democratic electoral system: the impossibility
>> supposition.
>>
>> That supposition implies some conception (albeit non-existent) of a
>> consistently derived right election result.
>>
>> If there is no such measure, then there is no standard even to judge that
>> there is a trade-off between electoral systems.
>>
>>
>>
>> Suppose there is a consistent theory of choice, setting a standard by
>> which electoral systems can be judged for their democratic consistency.
>>
>> It follows that the election result will only be as consistent as the
>> electoral system, and there is no pre-conceivably right election result,
>> because that presupposes a perfection not given to science as a progressive
>> pursuit.
>>
>>
>> --
>> Richard Lung.http://www.voting.ukscientists.com
>> Democracy Science series 3 free e-books in pdf:https://plus.google.com/106191200795605365085
>> E-books <https://plus.google.com/106191200795605365085E-books> in epub format:https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/democracyscience
>>
>>
>> ----
>> Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list
>> info
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Richard Lung.http://www.voting.ukscientists.com
> Democracy Science series 3 free e-books in pdf:https://plus.google.com/106191200795605365085
> E-books in epub format:https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/democracyscience
>
>
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