Mr. Harper wrote- Here's a stupid example: 11 A>B>C>D>E>F 10 B>C>A>E>F>D 9 C>A>B>F>D>E Now there's neither a Condorcet Winner, nor a Condorcet Loser, but I reckon any method which elects the same person as both the best and worst candidate has to have made a mistake somewhere... --- D- Can any of the choices get a YES majority ??? Each of the ABC group obviously defeats each of the DEF group. An ABC type group is called a Smith Set-- its members each defeat the members of other sets/groups.
- RE: Reverse Symmetry Criterion DEMOREP1
- Re: Reverse Symmetry Criterion DEMOREP1
- Re: Reverse Symmetry Criterion David Catchpole
- Re: Reverse Symmetry Criterion David Catchpole
- Re: Reverse Symmetry Criterion Martin Harper
