Format:
xi, 176 Seiten
Edition:
Online-Ausgabe Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press 2009 1 Online-Ressource
ISBN:
9780511614316
Series Statement:
Outlooks
Content:
Honesty in voting, it turns out, is not always the best policy. Indeed, in the early 1970s, Allan Gibbard and Mark Satterthwaite, building on the seminal work of Nobel laureate Kenneth Arrow, proved that with three or more alternatives there is no reasonable voting system that is non-manipulable; voters will always have an opportunity to benefit by submitting a disingenuous ballot. The ensuing decades produced a number of theorems of striking mathematical naturality that dealt with the manipulability of voting systems. This 2005 book presents many of these results from the last quarter of the twentieth century, especially the contributions of economists and philosophers, from a mathematical point of view, with many new proofs. The presentation is almost completely self-contained, and requires no prerequisites except a willingness to follow rigorous mathematical arguments. Mathematics students, as well as mathematicians, political scientists, economists and philosophers will learn why it is impossible to devise a completely unmanipulable voting system.
Note:
Online-Ausgabe:
Additional Edition:
Elektronische Reproduktion von Taylor, Alan D., 1947- Social choice and the mathematics of manipulation Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2005
Additional Edition:
9780521810524
Additional Edition:
9780521008839
Language:
English
Subjects:
Political Science
,
Mathematics
URL:
https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511614316
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