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Democracy - Two Models

Rabinowicz, Wlodek LU (2011) p.219-241
Abstract
Abstract in Undetermined
The point of departure in my story is the contrast between two models of democratic voting process: popular democracy and what might be called committee democracy. On one interpretation, voting in popular democracy is a procedure whose function is to aggregate the individuals’ preferences to something like a collective preference, while in committee democracy what is being aggregated are committee members’ judgments. The relevant judgments on the agenda often address an evaluative question. It is such value judgments that this paper focuses on. The question is how their aggregation differs from aggregation of preferences.
I focus on the case in which the two aggregation scenarios exhibit a far-reaching... (More)
Abstract in Undetermined
The point of departure in my story is the contrast between two models of democratic voting process: popular democracy and what might be called committee democracy. On one interpretation, voting in popular democracy is a procedure whose function is to aggregate the individuals’ preferences to something like a collective preference, while in committee democracy what is being aggregated are committee members’ judgments. The relevant judgments on the agenda often address an evaluative question. It is such value judgments that this paper focuses on. The question is how their aggregation differs from aggregation of preferences.
I focus on the case in which the two aggregation scenarios exhibit a far-reaching structural similarity: more precisely, the case in which, in the judgment aggregation scenario, the individual inputs are value rankings. This means that, formally, the individual judgments in this case have the same structure as preference rankings over a given set of alternatives, but while in a preference ranking the alternatives are ordered in accordance with one’s preferences, a value ranking expresses one’s comparative evaluation of the alternatives: say, this alternative is best, those two alternatives are second-best, that alternative is third-best, etc. I suggest that this difference in the nature of individual inputs in two aggregation scenarios has important implications for the task of aggregation. In particular, distance-based methods that look fine for the aggregation of judgments turn out to be inappropriate for the aggregation of preferences: Minimization of distance from individual inputs violates the Pareto condition.
When applied to judgment aggregation, distance-based methods can also be approached from the epistemic standpoint: the questions canl be posed concerning their advantages as a truth-tracker. In this context, what matters is not only the probability of the outcome of the aggregation procedure being true, but also the expected verisimilitude of the outcome: its expected distance from truth. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
social choice, aggregation, preference, value judgment, rankings, distance-based methods, Pareto, truth-tracking
host publication
Neither/Nor - Philosophical Essays dediscated to Erik Carlson on the Occasion of His 50th Birthday
editor
Sliwinski, Rysiek
pages
219 - 241
publisher
Uppsala Philosophical Studies
ISSN
1402-1110
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0e16f2b8-9c59-4459-8cf9-a46cb2ee4829 (old id 2295473)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 14:45:05
date last changed
2021-03-22 14:11:41
@inbook{0e16f2b8-9c59-4459-8cf9-a46cb2ee4829,
  abstract     = {{Abstract in Undetermined<br/>The point of departure in my story is the contrast between two models of democratic voting process: popular democracy and what might be called committee democracy. On one interpretation, voting in popular democracy is a procedure whose function is to aggregate the individuals’ preferences to something like a collective preference, while in committee democracy what is being aggregated are committee members’ judgments. The relevant judgments on the agenda often address an evaluative question. It is such value judgments that this paper focuses on. The question is how their aggregation differs from aggregation of preferences.<br/>I focus on the case in which the two aggregation scenarios exhibit a far-reaching structural similarity: more precisely, the case in which, in the judgment aggregation scenario, the individual inputs are value rankings. This means that, formally, the individual judgments in this case have the same structure as preference rankings over a given set of alternatives, but while in a preference ranking the alternatives are ordered in accordance with one’s preferences, a value ranking expresses one’s comparative evaluation of the alternatives: say, this alternative is best, those two alternatives are second-best, that alternative is third-best, etc. I suggest that this difference in the nature of individual inputs in two aggregation scenarios has important implications for the task of aggregation. In particular, distance-based methods that look fine for the aggregation of judgments turn out to be inappropriate for the aggregation of preferences: Minimization of distance from individual inputs violates the Pareto condition.<br/>When applied to judgment aggregation, distance-based methods can also be approached from the epistemic standpoint: the questions canl be posed concerning their advantages as a truth-tracker. In this context, what matters is not only the probability of the outcome of the aggregation procedure being true, but also the expected verisimilitude of the outcome: its expected distance from truth.}},
  author       = {{Rabinowicz, Wlodek}},
  booktitle    = {{Neither/Nor - Philosophical Essays dediscated to Erik Carlson on the Occasion of His 50th Birthday}},
  editor       = {{Sliwinski, Rysiek}},
  issn         = {{1402-1110}},
  keywords     = {{social choice; aggregation; preference; value judgment; rankings; distance-based methods; Pareto; truth-tracking}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{219--241}},
  publisher    = {{Uppsala Philosophical Studies}},
  title        = {{Democracy - Two Models}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/4144687/2295480.pdf}},
  year         = {{2011}},
}