On 02/04/2012 06:14 PM, robert bristow-johnson wrote:
On 2/4/12 4:12 AM, Kristofer Munsterhjelm wrote:
On 02/04/2012 06:47 AM, robert bristow-johnson wrote:

On 2/3/12 11:06 PM, Jameson Quinn wrote:

No, he's saying that when the CW and the true, honest utility winner
differ, the latter is better. I agree, but it's not an argument worth
making, because most people who don't already agree will think it's a
stupid one.

as do i. it's like saying that the Pope ain't sufficiently Catholic or
something like that. or that someone is better at being Woody Allen than
Woody Allen.

but for the moment, would you (Jameson, Clay, whoever) tell me, in as
clear (without unnecessary nor undefined jargon) and technical language
as possible, what/who the "true, honest utility winner" is? how is this
candidate defined, in terms the preference of the voters?

Utilitarianism is a form of ethics that proposes that the actions to
be taken are the ones that produces the greatest good for the greatest
number.

thank you. i *did* know what Utilitarianism is and suspected that the
term "utility" referred to that. and i understand the different norms
for combining the individual utility measures to get an aggregate
measure of utility to the group. the "taxicab norm" and the minmax (more
like the maxmin) norm was brought up. no one seemed to mention the
Euclidian norm.

i would say that the most fair combination is the mean magnitude
(taxicab) because it weights every voter's franchise equally. but what
is left unanswered is how the measure of utility for each voter is
defined. we can say that, for each voter that voted for the eventual
winner as their 1st choice (or most highly scored), their measure of
utility is "1". but what measure of utility do you assign to voters that
did not get their 1st choice?

Within a utilitarian system, each voter's utility for getting a certain choice is given. If you say there's a unit "utils", then a voter may get 0.8 utils if his second choice wins - or it might be 0.2. Only the voter (or an omniscient entity, as in Bayesian regret calculations) know how many utils voter x gets if choice y wins.

that is not well defined. given Abd's example:

2: Pepperoni (0.61), Cheese (0.5), Mushroom (0.4)
1: Cheese (0.8), Mushroom (0.7), Pepperoni (0)

who says that for that 1 voter that the utility of Cheese is 0.8?

The voter does. In this thought experiment, one simply assumes the 1-voter's utility of Cheese is 0.8 so as to show the point. The point is that there may be situations where utilitarian optimization and majority rule differs.

how is that function defined in the "proof" that Clay repeatedly refers to
where "it's a mathematically proven fact that Score does a better job
picking the Condorcet winner than does Condorcet"?

It isn't. Warren's argument that "Range is more Condorcet than Condorcet" is quite different. I assume Clay is using that argument when he claims "Range does a better job", but I don't know as I haven't seen Clay's arguments.

The first part of the argument is that, in the real world, people will have access to polling data. Then, Warren argues, this means they will act strategically. Say that X is the honest Condorcet winner (and polls show that he is). Then, according strategy, "anybody-but-X" people would rank X last. Depending on the method and X's margin of victory, that could make some other candidate win, which the anybody-but-X voters prefers.

Thus, after strategy, some Y that isn't X will be elected, and the Condorcet method (given the assumptions of voter behavior, polling, and strategy) failed to elect the sincere Condorcet winner.

The second part of the argument then involves showing that if everybody votes strategically in Range, reducing Range to approval, the honest Condorcet winner wins more often than when everybody votes strategically in Condorcet (burying the honest CW). Warren proves that, given certain assumptions of Approval strategy, at http://rangevoting.org/AppCW.html .


If you want to specify the proof further, you could say it really says this: "if more than a certain fraction strategize in both the Condorcet method and Range, if Condorcet strategy involves burying the sincere CW if you prefer someone else, and Approval strategists know who the top-two are, then Range elects the sincere CW more often than does the Condorcet method".

What if fewer people than that fraction strategize? Then Range will elect the CW less often than the Condorcet method, but then Warren refers to utilitarian reasoning and says: if people are mostly honest, then the normalized Range values are based on their true utilities, and thus the Range winner will have greater utility than the Condorcet winner, since the Condorcet method knows nothing about utility.

Or, the fork of the argument, simplified: If people strategize enough, the sincere CW wins more often in Range. If they don't, Range's winner is better anyway.

it's such a subjective thing and it can be defined in so many ways
that i am dubious of any tight mathematical "proof" that is based on
that. it's not subject defining the boundaries. if you get exactly
what  you want, the utility metric is 1. if you get *nothing* of what you
want, the utility is 0 (i.e. that pizza voter on the bottom may be a
vegetarian and would not be eating pizza at all, if they got Pepperoni).
there's a whole range of quantity that goes in between that is not
objectively defined.

Utilities, as such, aren't normalized (though Range votes probably would be). In the pizza example above, 1 is set to some arbitrary "really good" level, and commensurability means that 0.8 for one voter is as good to him as 0.8 is to the other voter.

As another example of in-between values, consider a pizza voter who doesn't like pineapple. If the consensus is a Hawaiian pizza, he can pick the pineapple off his slices, so it's not an "I won't eat this", but he'd prefer ordinary ham pizza to the Hawaiian. Perhaps, though, he prefers pepperoni to ham. Thus, he might have a ratings order (according to some common standard x):

Pepperoni: 0.8 x
Ham: 0.7 x
Hawaiian: 0.4 x
Anchovy: 0 (won't eat).

If he were to submit a honest Range or MJ ballot for this, then if everybody doing the voting knew what the standard x referred to, he would vote as above. If not, he'd probably normalize between worst and best and give a ballot of:

Pepperoni: 1
Ham: 0.9
Hawaiian: 0.5
Anchovy: 0.

so, i have a few questions for everyone here:

1. do we all agree that every voter's franchise is precisely equal?

Yes.

2. if each voter's franchise is equal, should we expect any voter
that has an opinion regarding the candidates/choices to
voluntarily dilute the weight or effectiveness of their vote,
even if their preference is weak?

In a pizza scenario, voters might voluntarily dilute their weight to be nice to the others. In a hotly contested governmental election, not as likely.

3. so, based on the answers to 1 and 2, if there is an election or
choice between only two alternatives (yes/no) or two candidates,
that this election be decided any differently than, as we
were told in elementary school, the "simple majority" with
"one person, one vote"?

Those using utilitarian reasoning would say that if the prerequisites hold (people know their utilities and they're commensurable), then a utility-optimizing outcome is better than a majoritarian one. They might then further reason that if you have something like Range and it's contested enough that you min/max your votes, no harm done (since it'll pass Majority), but if it's not, then the outcome can only improve.

if the answer to 3 is "no", on what basis would you assign non-equal
weighting to each vote? or if "simple majority" is not the criteria for
the collective decision, what is the alternative? award office to the
candidate with the minority vote?

I think Warren uses a "tyranny of the majority" example in this case. Consider a referendum to confiscate all property of a certain minority to redistribute to the majority (something like the Zimbabwe land reform). Further, assume honest voting and the status quo is set to zero. You'd get something like:

Majority: confiscate (slight improvement due to the share of the spoils), don't (zero). Minority: don't confiscate (zero), do confiscate (very large negative value).

In a majority vote, the majority wins. In Range, the minority keeps its property.

-

One could of course argue that in cases like tyranny-of-the-majority, the majority would just vote strategically to override the minority. Or one could argue that you can't really get commensurable utility values in the first place.

The former argument leads to considering the majority criterion a strategic one. It frees the voters from having to employ min/max strategy themselves, as they can honestly get what they would have to use strategy to otherwise get.

The latter argument was used by Arrow (of the impossibility criterion). He said, paraphrased, that rated methods were of little interest because one couldn't meaningfully compare one person's reported utilities with those of another. The Wikipedia article on Arrow's impossibility theorem uses the example of trying to get the combined ranking of performance within decathlon events -- how many points in a 1500 m race should 600 points in the discus event count as equivalent to? There's no obvious answer.

Note that if you set the weights of the decathlon events so that, say, the combined output order differs by as much as possible from the output of any of the individual orders - i.e. that no event should dominate - then you get IIA violation right away, because that depends on what individual events you include. So trying to derive a common standard from relatives can reintroduce IIA in a not altogether obvious manner.

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