Hi Chris, If we view CDTT somehow as an election method, then when it fails mono-add-plump, the bullet votes for X are not simply "strengthening" X, they are also *weakening* some pairwise victory of Y over Z, which X had relied upon in order to have a majority beatpath to Z.
Of course, you can always use the mechanics of the method to explain why something has happened. But it seems to me that the bullet voters aren't purely "strengthening" X, they are also weakening Y and thereby also X. This is an oddity inherent to beatpaths, really. As far as I can tell you are calling this failure "absurd" for no reason except mono-add-plump. Why is mono-add-plump important? If it were more difficult to satisfy, like Participation, I doubt it would ever come up. This failure doesn't create a huge strategy problem: If you guess that you might be better off staying home than bullet voting, then probably you can also guess which beatpaths your vote needs to reinforce in order to protect the candidate you want. --- En date de : Ven 9.1.09, Chris Benham <[email protected]> a écrit : > No, I only wrote that the beatpath GMC *concept* is > "vulnerable to > Mono-add-Plump." I find it difficult to nail down what this means. It seems clear from Markus' mails that he isn't going to discuss a criterion as though it were a method. Woodall also had to define criteria differently in order to apply them to sets. But to apply criteria to a concept? > I think that all methods that fail Independence from > Irrelevant Ballots are silly and > that methods should meet the Majority criterion. The > Majority *concept* is > "vulnerable to Irrelevant Ballots" because > candidate A can be the only candidate > allowed to win by the Majority criterion and then we add a > handful of ballots that > all plump for nobody and candidate A no longer has a > majority. This is problematic. The same concept underlies both Majority and the CDTT. Since you value Majority as a criterion, it seems to me that you can't attack the CDTT by attacking the underlying concept. > The point of my Dec.29 demonstration was to refute any > notion or assumption > that all candidates in the CDTT (i.e. those not excluded by > Beatpath GMC) must > be "stronger" (i.e. more representative of the > voters and so more deserving of victory) > than any of the candidates outside the CDTT. Well, you would have to define "representative." In the three-candidate case, at least, I think it's a problem to elect a candidate who isn't in the CDTT. > This was only the first part of my argument that Beatpath > GMC [compliance] is a > "mistaken standard". What other > criterion/standard says that the winner must come > from set S, with S being a set that a candidate X can be > kicked out of by an influx > of new ballots that all plump (bullet-vote) for X? Well, with "Mutual Majority," when X may win, it's possible that by adding bullet votes for X, then every other candidate becomes able to win. You're talking specifically about mono-add-plump, but in a real single- winner election method this would be exactly the same phenomenon: Additional bullet votes for X cause X to lose to someone else. Is there any way to explain, why it isn't completely absurd, that adding bullet votes for X should cause other candidates to become eligible to win? > By itself that isn't conclusively > damning because it doesn't prove > that Beatpath GMC can exclude the strongest candidate. > > 25: A>B > 26: B>C > 23: C>A > 26: C > > But I contend that here in my "situation 2" > election Beatpath GMC does exclude > the clearly strongest candidate C. You ignored the last > few paragraphs of my last post: You're attacking a lot more than just beatpath GMC with this scenario. Excluding C is required by SFC (the 51 B voters are basically assured LNHarm when voting for C, since B might be the sincere CW) and also basically any WV method. If you want to use approval-based or positional arguments, I guess you won't find much to support in the Condorcet world. > .. I don't accept your suggestion that compliance with > beatpath GMC is acceptably cheap > (let alone free), because it isn't compatible with > my recently suggested "Smith- Comprehensive > 3-slot Ratings Winner" criterion, which I value much > more. > > http://lists.electorama.com/pipermail/election-methods-electorama.com/2008-December/023595.html > > In other words the CDTT set can fail to include the > candidate that on overwhelming > common-sense (mostly positional) grounds is the strongest > candidate (e.g. C in "Situation # 2"). Having read that archive post the motivation behind the criteria (especially the Smith-compatible one) is unclear to me. For an example, why couldn't you propose instead "CDTT-C3RW"? The only reason you gave for adding a beatpath requirement is that you're "still interested" in Condorcet methods. > So given a method that meets what I've been recently > calling "Strong Minimal Defense" > (and so Minimal Defense and Plurality) and Schwartz (and so > fails LNHarm and meets Majority > for Solid Coalitions), I consider the addition of > compliance with "beatpath GMC" a negative if > without it the method can meet "Smith- Comprehensive > 3-slot Ratings Winner" (which > should be very very easy). It should be very easy? What methods are there other than Schwartz//Approval? Kevin Venzke ---- Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
