Dear Greg,

> Reasons why Range is better and always will be.
> I would like to end the truce.

That won't work I guess. Using the term "better" alone is a major flaw of many 
discussions here. Obviously, it all depends on what goals a method is expected 
to achieve.

> I'll be generous to the Condorcet camp and assume they suggest 
> something reasonable like RP, Schulze or River.

As you might guess, I appreciate this, of course :-)

> Property Related:
> favorite betrayal, participation and consistency.
> Implications:
> 1) It is always good to vote and it is always good to rate your 
> favorite candidate 100. The only Condorcet method to satisfy favorite 
> betrayal is an obscure variant of Minmax which I'll ignore because of 
> its glaring flaws (clone dependence *cough*)
> 2) How does it make sense to be able to divide a region into two 
> constituencies each electing A if B is the actual winner? Condorcet 
> methods are not additive, this calls into question the actual meaning 
> of being elected by a Condorcet method.

No, it calls into question the actual meaning of being elected in a region. The 
misunderstanding arises only when you interpret the election of A in a region 
as meaning that A is "best" in some sense. But Condorcet methods are based on a 
different logic than measuring "goodness" of candidates. They have more to do 
with stability, for example: Electing a candidate other than the Condorcet 
Winner always faces immediate opposition by some majority who prefers the 
Condorcet Winner. So, if you consider majorities significant (which you seem to 
judging from your reasoning further down), you should consequently not accept 
different winner when a Condorcet Winner is available.

> answers to potentital majority rule counterarguments:
> 1) Range voting isn't a majority method.
> answer: any majority can impose their will if they choose to exercise 
> it. 

I greatly appreciate your making this clear! Warren has often argued that Range 
is *not* really majoritarian when I pointed this out. The main point is of 
course the question of whether one assumes intelligent voters who vote 
strategically or dumb voters who vote "honestly" against their own interest 
(whatever "honestly" means with a ratings-based method - more on this below). 
When we assume intelligent voters, Range is clearly a majoritarian method.

That leads me to the main problem with Range (as with any other majoritarian 
method): It is simply not democratic. It cannot be because every majoritarian 
method gives 100% of the power to less than 100% of the people (the "demos" in 
greek). Often, about 60% of the people can consistently impose their will on 
the other 40% without the latter being given any means at all by the 
majoritarian method to influence the decision. Of course, this is a problem of 
most popular election methods, but that does not mean the problem cannot be 
solved. Democratic decisions are possible but not with majoritarian methods.

> Voter Experience:
> 
> Range Voting (based on the existence of Amazon product ratings, 
> youtube video ratings, hotornot.com, the number of movies rated out 
> of stars.) I cannot find a single instance of Condorcet methods 
> besides elections in various open source communities. It doesn't 
> qualify as mainstream.

That may be right but is irrelevant for the question of what is a good method 
and what is not.

> Understandability:
> 
> Range Voting (I dare anyone to challenge me on this)

Then let me challenge you right away: I don't understand at all what those 
numbers a range-ballot asks me for are supposed to mean. They are not explained 
but instead it is simply assumed naively that each voter will be able to assign 
meaningful numbers to options. Some even suggest that voters should apply their 
"gut feelings" to derive the numbers - as if voting were about diffuse emotions 
and not hard facts. In real world situations it is difficult enough to decide 
whether I *prefer* A to B or B to A or neither to the other. Often enough it 
turns out that A is preferable in some aspects and B is preferable in other 
aspects. Suggesting to weigh the aspects first is of no help since it lifts the 
problem of coming up with meaningful numbers only to a higher, more abstract 
level. Also, Range advocates tell us that the numbers are not simply supposed 
to be monetary values but rather such things as degrees of "utility" or perhaps 
"happiness". Simple question: Can you enumerate y
 our happiness with, say, having saved a species from extinction? And even if 
some people can, it is obviously not justified to simply assume that every 
voter should be able to do such magic without at least providing some serious 
scientific evidence for such a bold claim.

Yours,
Jobst

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