On Jan 20, 2010, at 11:23 AM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax wrote:

Variation on previous post. Silly time!

At 02:31 PM 1/16/2010, robert bristow-johnson wrote:

On Jan 16, 2010, at 12:05 PM, Abd ul-Rahman Lomax wrote:

Robert, your slip is showing.

what slip?  i don't have nuttin' under me kilt.

We already knew that.

you do?  you keep saying that you can see it.


Silly hat, Off.

Robert, if you want to be effective in public debate,

what makes you think i'm not effective? do you actually think you were effective?

i won't slap on the "argumentum verbosium" and explode the debate about a single testable issue (like how many piles one needs if there are 3 candidates) into pages and pages, that when i responded, my post was rejected by the list server as too large.


I'd suggest avoiding setting up an immediate victory by the other side by feeding him or her lines like that.

you're the one feeding lines. who brought up the "slip showing" in the first place? how does one respond when facing: "Your slip is showing, now onto a verbose response that does not speak to the core factual issues at all".

you and Kathy had no "victory" (if that is the way you like looking at it). where it is about fact (derived or historically supported) regarding the focussed issue, you haven't done anything to touch it.

the fact is, transmitting the content (to a central counting location) of *every ballot* is the transfer of a finite amount of information. that is even *more* general than sorting to piles and transmitting the tallies for piles.

but breaking it down to piles regarding every conceivable permutation of candidate preference is *still* breaking it down to a finite number of piles. for 3 candidates, that number is 9. if you or Kathy say it's 15, then you're wrong (and it's your slip that's showing). for 4 candidates the number of necessary piles is 40. for N candidates, the number of piles necessary, P(N) is

           N-1
    P(N) = SUM{ N!/n! }
           n=1

not

           N-1
    P(N) = SUM{ N!/n! }
           n=0

which is appears to be the formula you and Kathy continue to insist is correct. and whether Kathy has an MS in Mathematics or not, whether you do or not, this error is demonstrable. you and Kathy continue to insist that there is a consequential difference between ranking all candidates and ranking all but 1 and leaving one candidate unranked and i continue to say there is no consequential difference. this is a difference of falsifiable claims that form a dichotomy. we can test which claim is correct.

In person, face-to-face, people would fall over laughing, and whatever value there was in your position would be lost.


you've never used humor to make a point? or to make clear the lameness of an irrelevant reference?

whether one responds to an irrelevant distraction with humor or not changes nothing regarding the core issues.

certainly if a ridiculously large number of candidates are on the ballot, manually separating ballots into piles (without grouping together minor or non-credible candidates) is not practical. even with 4 salient candidates, 40 piles gets pretty nasty for sorting by *hand*. but 40 is still a pretty small number for a computer and a modern network.

a national election with 3 credible candidates can easily be "precinct summable" with 9 salient piles and 31 less important piles. it doesn't matter if it is IRV, Condorcet, Borda or what. the issue of summing pile count is not dependent on what tabulation method is used (and what, *i* think, should be what the debate is about).

neither you nor Kathy have shown *any* problem of "precinct summability" regarding IRV or any other ranked-ballot method.

not that i am a defender of IRV. but, you haven't laid a hand on it regarding "precinct summability". IRV has a few pathologies, which i think i understand better than either you or Kathy, simply from the lame and partisan arguments (and wholly verbose) i read coming from that direction.

even though *now* Kathy seems to be paying some attention to Condorcet, before this last week, i haven't noticed any such attention about that from her. it was always just how bad IRV is, and that it's worse than any other method, including FPTP. and when she (or you) says that, then i am convinced that she (or you) are simply anti-IRV partisans that don't really consider what the *commonly* *known* problems are that associated with the traditional FPTP (or even 2-round with runoff) methods for which motivated us to adopt IRV in the first place.

so, before pointing out that someone's slip is showing, it might be safer to adjust where one's own fig leaf is hanging.

--

r b-j                  [email protected]

"Imagination is more important than knowledge."




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