On Dec 29, 2007 7:52 PM, Dave Ketchum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Your enthusiasm for Approval continues to puzzle. How could many voters > find its inability to give backing to more than one, while flagging one as > best, acceptable?
social utility efficiency calculations show that approval generally produces more "acceptable" outcomes than condorcet, borda, irv, etc. you're making a classic fallacy of focusing on the voting process - the ballot itself - instead of the election outcome. we don't hold elections for the enjoyment of filling out ballots. we hold them for the enjoyment of getting a society we like. > As to Range, I simply note my preference for Condorcet. well, the evidence says your preferences will be better satisfied by range than condorcet. so it appears you're wrong. unless maybe you meant that you literally prefer using condorcet voting over range voting SO MUCH that you'd be willing to get a less preferable election result just to have more fun during the 5-10 minutes it takes you to vote. do you really like something about that ranked ballot, or those condorcet tabulation rules _so much more_ that it trumps your concern for the effect of government policy on the environment, human lives, etc.? that's pretty callous if you ask me. and pretty bizarre that the state of the world is less important to you than the experience you have during the 5-10 minutes you vote. > > that is a bad recommendation, since it implies condorcet voting (the > > only method where every voter has the same strength), which is nowhere > > near as utilitarian as range voting. > > Debatable. oh yeah? where's your evidence that it's debatable? ---- Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
