DEMOREP1 wrote: >Mr. Eppley wrote: >>If it doesn't take much time, how about doing these 3-candidate random >>simulations: -snip- >Again, such 24.0, 25.3 and 50.7 split is highly suspect in a real election. I thank the distinguished gentleman from aol for running those simulations, and for his quick response. I agree the splits are suspect. I think people who bother to vote would rarely be utterly indifferent in any pairing, and I'd hope enough people would understand ranked ballots to be able to represent their preferences accurately if they want. Also suspect is the randomness of the preference orders in these simulations. For example, I'd expect in a real election the numbers of A>B>C votes and A>C>B votes would be highly unequal, since voters who like A the most would often tend to analyze B vs C in similar ways. But in a random simulation, the number of A>B>C votes is going to be close to the number of A>C>B votes, just as the number of tails and heads are close in a series of coin tosses. ---Steve (Steve Eppley [EMAIL PROTECTED])
