Abd ulRahman Lomax abd-at-lomaxdesign.com |EMlist| wrote:
The whole page is not exactly a model of clarity, but I did think that I understood what Definite Majority Choice meant. But here is how the text in question reads now, having been changed back by Mr. Araucana:
>> The least-approved candidate in the definite majority set >> pairwise defeats ''all'' higher-approved candidates, including >> all other members of the definite majority set, and is the DMC >> winner.
So the least-approved candidate ... is the winner? Explain this thing to me....
Abd,
Yes, it is the true that the least-approved candidate of the *definite majority set* wins. However, explaining it that way is a prescription for confusion. A better way to explain it, I think, is that the least-approved candidate is eliminated until a Condorcet winner is found (a Condorcet winner is a candidate who beats each of the other candidates in a pairwise competition). That candidate will indeed be the least-approved of the *remaining* candidates. He wins, not because of that fact, but because of the fact that he is also the Condorcet winner of the *remaining* candidates. I hope that is clearer.
--Russ ---- Election-methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
