On Wed, 31 Aug 2005 12:29:17 -0400 Eric Gorr wrote: > Dave Ketchum wrote: > >> On Wed, 31 Aug 2005 11:22:21 -0400 Eric Gorr wrote: >> >>> Dave Ketchum wrote: >>> >>>> OnTue, 30 Aug 2005 14:45:58 -0400 Eric Gorr wrote: >>>> >>>>> http://wiki.electorama.com/wiki/Definite_Majority_Choice >>>>> >>>>> When it comes to the handling of ties, what objections would there >>>>> be to using Eppley's Random Voter Hierarchy (RVH - >>>>> http://alumnus.caltech.edu/~seppley/MAM%20procedure%20definition.htm)? >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> It seems likely that injecting some possible randomness into an >>>>> otherwise deterministic method would reduce the potential for >>>>> strategic manipulation. >>>>> >>>>> Furthermore, it would make the complete explanation of DMC far >>>>> similar then having to explain the six stages after which one still >>>>> may(?) end up with an unresolved tie and no predefined way to >>>>> resolve it. >>>>> >>>> I do not like Eppley, for sorting out an understandable description of >>>> what it does is too much pain for the possible good. Sure, it does math >>>> and decides who won, but that level is not enough. >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> Sorry...I am having trouble understanding what you are attempting to >>> say here other then you do not like the RVH. >> >> >> >> >> RVH could be fine for those in EM that understood it, and most >> anyplace for decisions that were not critical for those affected. > > > What's difficult to understand? > > It is simply randomly selected a ballot, acquiring the preferences from > that ballot which are undefined, until a strict ordering for every > candidate is determined. Of course, if after processing all of the > ballots, there are unordered candidates, they are simply appended to the > end of the list in a random fashion. > Let's try for all the possibilities:
Manipulation of who gets to vote, and whether the count gets based on all those votes - IMPORTANT topic to work on, but not an EM topic beyond picking a method simple enough to be understood. Strategic manipulation by voters - methods should be chosen to discourage being able to do this successfully. Vote count did not indicate a true tie. Then you accept what the count says, even if it says far from a tie - hard to usefully blame strategies at this point. True tie - so all you need is chance, which does not require a computer. Introducing a program for these rare instances is counterproductive, as I said above. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] people.clarityconnect.com/webpages3/davek Dave Ketchum 108 Halstead Ave, Owego, NY 13827-1708 607-687-5026 Do to no one what you would not want done to you. If you want peace, work for justice. ---- Election-methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info