At 01:38 AM 1/18/2009, Juho Laatu wrote:
I don't quite see why ranking based
methods (Range, Approval) would not
follow the same principles/definitions
as rating based methods. The sincere
message of the voter was above that she
only slightly prefers B over A but the
strategic vote indicated that she finds
B to be maximally better than A (or
that in order to make B win she better
vote this way).

That is an *interpretation* of a Range vote. In fact, they are just votes, and the voter casts them according to the voter's understanding of what's best. This has been part of my point: Range votes don't "indicate" preference strength, as such. Consider Approval, which is a Range method. If the voter votes A=B>>C=D, what does this tell us? We can infer some preferences from it, to be sure, and those preferences are probably accurate, because Approval never rewards a truly insincere vote. But does this vote "indicate" that the voter has no preference between A and B, nor between C and D? Of course not!

Now, a Range vote. But the voter votes Approval style. What does this tell us about the voter preferences? *Nothing more and nothing less.* The voter chose to vote that way for what reason? We don't know!!!

They are votes, not sentiments. Voters may choose to express relative preference, in Range, with some fineness of expression, but they may also choose not to make refined expressions, and all these votes are sincere, i.e., they imply no preferences that we cannot reasonably infer from them with a general understanding that the voter had no incentive to show preferences opposite to the actual.

(Now, there is a kind of insincere voting that voters may engage in, but it isn't really rewarded, and voters will only do it when they expect it to be moot. And they may do this kind of insincere voting with any method whatever.)

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