Dear Folks!

I like Forest's idea. Most probably, one has to alter it slightly in order to 
get monotonicity. For example like this:

Let the "approval sequence" of a set S of candidates be the sequence of 
approval values of the elements of S in increasing order and continued to 
infinity by appending infinity at the end. Let's say that a set T has "larger" 
approval than a set S when T's approval sequence is lexicographically larger 
than S's, that is, when the first position in which both sequences differ is 
larger in T's approval sequence than in S's. Elect the winner from the 
[majority] dense set whose approval is largest in this sense, using Random 
Ballot. This way the method should hopefully be monotonic and the used dense 
set is automatically minimal without requiring this explicitly. 

E.g., if S={A,B,C} and T={B,D} are the only dense sets, and A,B,C,D have 
approval scores 5,3,10, and 4, then the approval sequences of S and T would be 
(3,5,10,infinity,infinity,...) and (3,4,infinity,infinity,...), and hence T 
would have a "larger" approval sequence than S since they coincide in the 
smallest approval but T's 2nd smallest approval is larger than S's. So the 
winner would be chosen by Random Ballot from T.

Yours, Jobst

"Simmons, Forest" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb am 12.11.05 01:14:53:
> 
>  
> 
> Paul Kislanko asked ...
> 
> Why introduce "majority dense" and not use that?
>  
> Forest answers:
>  
> 1.  Because it wasn't necessary for the purpose of my message, which was to 
> nudge readers out of their mental ruts.
> 
> 2.  Is the introducer the only one who can use an idea?
>  
> Paul went on to ask ...
> 
> How do you define "approval sum" in this context?
>  
> I answer:
>  
> It doesn't matter what I had in mind, since my purpose is to get the reader 
> to innovate.
>  
> Forest
> 
> 
> 
> <hr>
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> 


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