Due to Arrow's impossibility theorem, the Stack Overflow moderator election should be unfair since voters need to order three different candidates by ranking. Is this a flaw in the election, or am I applying Arrow's theorem wrong?
1 Answer
Is this a flaw in the election, or am I applying Arrow's theorem wrong?
Depends on how exactly you define flaw. Arrow’s theorem says essentially that there is no completely fair¹ rank-based voting system. However, this does not mean that true rank-based voting systems² are bad in comparison to other voting systems, as:
- Rank-based voting system in the sense of Arrow’s theorem comprises a lot, including plain majority voting.
- Alternative systems are usually much worse on a level that isn’t even assessed by Arrow’s criteria, e.g., you have indirect voting or voters are not considered equal to begin with.
Thus, if you so wish, the result of Arrow’s theorem is that there cannot be any completely fair¹ voting system at all (unless you have only two choices, which does not apply here). In this sense, all voting systems are inevitably flawed – including Stack Overflow’s.
However, being rank-based is not a flaw of Stack Overflow’s voting system per se. True rank-based systems² are much less flawed than, e.g., plain majority voting and the STV system used by Stack Overflow is arguably very well suited for its purpose. It has flaws (such as allowing us to rank only three candidates) and of course it suffers from the inevitable problems due to Arrow’s theorem, but being rank-based itself is not a flaw – it’s an asset.
¹ according to some simple, reasonable criteria
² i.e., voting systems which actually take into account all ranks, and do not just discard all but the first choice of each voter
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1So what you're saying is that even though this voting system isn't perfect, it's the best we can possibly do?– u8y7541Commented Aug 5, 2017 at 21:03
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2@u8y7541: Mostly. As I said in the last sentence, there are aspect that could be improved, but that’s the icing on the cake, not a fundamental issue. Commented Aug 5, 2017 at 21:30
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It would indeed be nice to reduce the number of "exhausted" votes, for instance in the last election there was a victory by some 2k votes, but there were 6k exhausted votes. opavote.com/results/5927932925050880/0#anchor-8– NemoCommented Aug 6, 2017 at 13:13
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1@Nemo: Or one should change his/her name to "exhaused" before running :)– unutbuCommented Aug 6, 2017 at 19:01
when voters have three or more distinct alternatives
isn't referring to being able to select 3 at a time, it's talking about the whole problem of having 3 or more people who are possible to elect; Like if A, B, and C are all running for president, and A is similar to B, C will win because the votes for A and B will be split, even if A would have won in a A vs. C election. Now... that does still apply to this situation, just not how you think. We have many candidates, so giving 3 votes to every person is actually a good way to handle it.