I think thee may two different kind of Range elections, competitive and 
non-competitive. In the non-competitive ones all voters *are*expected* to rate 
all the candidates sincerely. This kind of voting could take place e.g. in some 
sports competition. All judges are expected to be neutral. In politics 
elections are typically competitive. Voters want to do all they can to make 
their favourites win. In Range stratgic voting is so easy and obvious (although 
picking the right strategy may be really difficult when there are more than two 
potential winners) that it may well become a norm not only to cast a normalized 
vote but to also use approval strategy. Sincere voting could be considered a 
mistake that voters should avoid. In Condorcet strategic opportunities are 
quite rare and people could therefore (and because of the "unjustified nature" 
of burial) well consider strategic voting immoral. Just like dropping two 
ballots in the ballot box may be considered inappropriate in most e
 lections today (i.e. he person doing so could not proudly brag that she found 
an efficient strategic way to vote but she better stay silent to avoid being 
considered an enemy of the otherwise well working society).

Juho


On 9.5.2011, at 10.26, Kristofer Munsterhjelm wrote:

> Jameson Quinn wrote:
>> How hard it is to vote in each system is an empirical, not a theoretical 
>> system. The evidence is pretty clear that it is easier for most people to 
>> rate candidates on an absolute scale - whether numeric or verbal - rather 
>> than ranking them relative to each other. That is true despite the fact that 
>> it is illogical, that in some sense it should be easier to give a ranked 
>> vote which contains less information. But the fact remains: people can 
>> usually vote faster, with less ballot spoilage, and with less self-reported 
>> difficulty, under Range as compared to Condorcet.
> 
> I must be odd then, as I find ranking easier than rating. When I rate, I feel 
> like I have to be certain I'm rating them all by a common exact standard, and 
> that I'm not just being right about the ordering but also about "by how 
> much": "Do I rate X at 50% or 55%?". In contrast, for ranking, I just have to 
> know: "I would rather live in a nation with X in power than with Y in power".
> 
> In addition, for Range in particular, if I want to make my vote count, I have 
> to vote Approval-style. Picking the right approval cutoff requires access to 
> polls as well as some amount of cleverness. Again, I'm not completely sure 
> why, but I feel that is something I have to do in Range, but ballot 
> optimization in Condorcet (burial, that is), is cheating and bad; perhaps 
> because optimizing well in Range doesn't involve the chance that a candidate 
> you really didn't want to win will win, whereas that can happen with burial.
> 
> ----
> Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info

----
Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info

Reply via email to