How do we save Edits on the electowiki....?
I can't see changes I made to the Proportional Representation page..

On 2011-11-18 00:18, Jameson Quinn wrote:
I agree with Chris.

But mostly, I'm writing to say that I would really like someone to fill in:

http://wiki.electorama.com/wiki/MDDTR
http://wiki.electorama.com/wiki/MTA

Of course, redirects are fine. And you don't have to put in all sorts of sections for compliances and such if you don't know them, just a few sentences explaining the method itself is plenty.

Thanks,
Jameson

2011/11/17 C.Benham <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>


         49: C
         27: A>B
         24: B

         I agree that *if* the sincere preferences are as Mike
        specifies then a
        just interventionist mind-reading God
        should award the election to A.

        [endquote]

        Fine. But can Chris say what's wrong with that outcome in
        other instances?



    Yes. If the method used meets Later-no-Harm but fails
    Later-no-Help, i.e has
    a strong random-fill incentive like the MDD,TR method that Mike is
    advocating, there
    isn't any good reason to assume that the Middle ratings are sincere.

    So it could be that all the voters really have no interest in any
    candidate except their favourites
    and sincere is

    49: C
    27: A
    24: B

    in which case C is the strong sincere Condorcet winner, or as
    Jameson pointed out it could
    be worse still and the A voters were Burying against C so sincere is

    49: C
    27: A>C
    24: B


        Chris continues:

        Given the incentives of the MDD,TR method that Mike is
        advocating, it is
        only reasonable to assume that the truncators
        are all sincere

        [endquote]

        Wait a minute: I'm not saying that B truncation is a problem
        in MDDTR or MMPO. In fact,
        my point is that it is _not_.



    Truncation isn't a "problem" (for the full-rankers) as an
     "offensive strategy". The problem is that it
    isn't fair to the sincere truncators.


        Wait a minute. These candidates in this example are A, B, and C.

        How does A lack legitimacy? Among the candidates not
        majority-defeated, A
        has more favoriteness-supporters than any other candidate.



    Translation: "I love this arbitrary algorithm, so any winner it
    produces is by definition legitimate."

    A's win lacks legitimacy simply because there is another candidate
    that was vastly better supported on
    the ballots.

    If we add between 2 and 21 ballots that plump for A, then C's
    "majority-defeatedness" goes away and
    the winner changes from A to C, another failure of  Mono-add-Plump.

    If we nonetheless accept that C but not A should be immediately
    disqualified, electing the undisqualified
    candidate with the most top-ratings is just another arbitrary
    feature of the algorithm.

    Why that candidate and not the one that is most approved?  Based
    on the information actually on the ballots,
    no faction of voters has a very strong post-election complaint
    against B.

    Chris Benham


    49: C
    27: A>B
    21: A   (new voters, whose ballots change the MDD,TR winner from A
    to C)
    24: B




    Mike Ossipoff wrote (17 Nov 2011):

    Chris said:

    Mike refers to this scenario:

    > The Approval bad-example is an example of that. I'll give it
    again here:
    >
    > Sincere preferences:
    >
    > 49: C
    > 27: A>B
    > 24: B>A
    >
    > A majority _equally strongly_ prefer A and B to C.
    >
    >
    > Actual votes:
    >
    > The A voters defect, in order to take advantage of the
    > co-operativeness and
    > responsibility of the A voters:
    >
    > 49: C
    > 27: A>B
    > 24: B
    >

    I agree that *if* the sincere preferences are as Mike specifies then a
    just interventionist mind-reading God
    should award the election to A.

    [endquote]

    Fine. But can Chris say what's wrong with that outcome in other
    instances?

    Chris continued:

    But a voting method's decisions and philosophical justification should
    be based on  information that is actually
    on the ballots, not on some guess or  arbitrary assumption about some
    maybe-existing "information" that isn't.

    [endquote]

    Why? Why shouldn't a voting system avoid a worst-case, if, by so
    doing,
    it hasn't been shown to act seriously wrongly in other cases?

    And MMPO & MDDTR don't just bring improvement in the Approval
    bad-example. They,
    in general, get rid of any strategy dilemma regarding whether you
    should middle-rate
    a lesser-evil instead of bottom-rating hir. For instance, consider the
    A 100, B 15, C 0 utility example.

    In MCA, there's a question about whether you should middle-rate or
    bottom-rate B. In
    MDDTR and MMPO, that dilemma is completely eliminated.

    In those methods, middle rating someone can never help hir against
    your favorite(s).

    Chris continues:

    I think a very reasonable tenet is that if, based on the
    information on
    the ballots, candidate X utterly dominates
    candidate Y then we should not elect Y.

    [endquote]

    Yes, there are many reasonable tenets among the aesthetic criteria.

    Chris continues:

    For several reasons (for those who can pooh-pooh this as "merely
    aesthetic"): electing Y gives the supporters
    of X a  very strong post-election complaint with no common-sense or
    philosophically cogent answer, X is highly
    likely to be higher Social Utility (SU),  Y's victory will have
    compromised legitimacy.

    [endquote]

    Wait a minute. These candidates in this example are A, B, and C.

    How does A lack legitimacy? Among the candidates not
    majority-defeated, A
    has more favoriteness-supporters than any other candidate.

    Chris continues:

    The Plurality criterion is one very reasonable criterion that says
    that
    C  is so much stronger than A that the election
    of  A can't be justified. .

    [endquote]

    There are lots of aesthetic criteria that say things like that,
    and they all sound
    aesthetically reasonable. How great is their practical strategic
    importance?


    Chris continued:

    There are other criteria I find reasonable
    that say the same thing:

    "Strong Minimal Defense": If the number of ballots on which both X is
    voted above bottom and Y isn't is greater than
    the total number of ballots on which Y is voted above bottom, then
    don't
    elect Y.

    [endquote]

    But can you word that in such a way that it isn't met by Plurality?

    What sort of strategic guarantees are protected by the criteria
    that you propose in this posting?

    Chis continues:

    The election of  A is unacceptable because C's domination of  A is
    vastly more impressive than A's pairwise win over
    B.  The Plurality criterion plus the three other criteria I define
    above
    all loudly say "not A".

    [endquote]

    In other words, it looks bad from those perspectives.

    The election of A is justified by its being consistent with FBC,
    SFC or SFC3,
    freedom from dilemma about middle-rating a compromise, and either
    Later-No-Harm or non"failure" in Kevin's MMPO bad-example.
     --things that are
    guaranteed by MMPO and MDDTR.

    Additionally, as I was showing to Jameson, electing A in these methods
    isn't really wrong.



    > The A voters defect, in order to take advantage of the
    > co-operativeness and
    > responsibility of the A voters:

    Chris replies:

    The plausibility of  arbitrary claims about the voters' sincere
    preferences and motivations

    [endquote]

    More a matter of "what if", rather than claims.

    Chris continued:

    can weighed in the light of the
    used election method's incentives. How is it so "co-operative and
    responsible" of the A voters to rank B when doing
    so (versus truncating) can only help their favourite?

    [endquote]

    It's co-operative because it defeats the candidate commonly
    disliked by A
    voters and B voters, in MCA, MDDTR and MMPO.

    If neither did that, C would win.

    If the A voters refused to, and, instead, the B voters
    co-operated, then it would
    be B would win, by being the defectors.

    Chris continues:

    And why would the
    B voters be insincerely truncating ("defecting")
    when doing so can only harm their favourite?

    [endquote]

    In MCA that defection could give their favorite the win, if the A
    voters have
    co-operated, in spite of the A voters being more numerous.

    In MPPO or MDDTR, the problem doesn't exist. The A voters can
    co-operate or
    defect, and A will still win, having more top ratings. Hardly a
    controversial
    result.

    Chris continues:

    Given the incentives of the MDD,TR method that Mike is advocating,
    it is
    only reasonable to assume that the truncators
    are all sincere

    [endquote]

    Wait a minute: I'm not saying that B truncation is a problem in
    MDDTR or MMPO. In fact,
    my point is that it is _not_.  But co-operaton/defection is indeed
    a problem in MCA.
    Hency my advocacy of MDDTR and MMPO.


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