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- Condorcet_method abstract "A Condorcet method is any election method that elects the candidate that would win by majority rule in all pairings against the other candidates, whenever one of the candidates has that property. A candidate with that property is called a Condorcet winner (named for the 18th-century French mathematician and philosopher Marie Jean Antoine Nicolas Caritat, the Marquis de Condorcet, who championed such outcomes). A Condorcet winner doesn't always exist because majority preferences can be like rock-paper-scissors: for each candidate, there can be another that is preferred by some majority (this is known as Condorcet paradox).Voting methods that always elect the Condorcet winner (when one exists) are the ones that satisfy the Condorcet criterion.Most Condorcet methods have a single round of voting, in which each voter ranks the candidates from top to bottom. A voter's ranking is often called his or her order of preference, although it may not match his or her sincere order of preference since voters are free to rank in any order they choose and may have strategic reasons to misrepresent preferences. There are many ways that the votes can be tallied to find a winner, and not all ways will elect the Condorcet winner whenever one exists. The methods that will—the Condorcet methods—can elect different winners when no candidate is a Condorcet winner. Thus the Condorcet methods can differ on which other criteria they satisfy.[citation needed]The Robert's Rules method for voting on motions and amendments is also a Condorcet method even though the voters do not vote by expressing their orders of preference. There are multiple rounds of voting, and in each round the vote is between two of the alternatives. The loser (by majority rule) of a pairing is eliminated, and the winner of a pairing survives to be paired in a later round against another alternative. Eventually only one alternative remains, and it is the winner. This is analogous to a single-winner tournament; the total number of pairings is one less than the number of alternatives. Since a Condorcet winner will win by majority rule in each of its pairings, it will never be eliminated by Robert's Rules. A considerable portion of the literature on social choice theory is about the properties of this method since it is widely used and is used by important organizations (legislatures, councils, committees, etc.). It is not practical for use in public elections, however, since its multiple rounds of voting would be very expensive for voters, for candidates, and for governments to administer.[citation needed]Ramon Llull devised the earliest known Condorcet method in 1299. His method did not have voters express orders of preference; instead, it had a round of voting for each of the possible pairings of candidates. (This was more like the Robert's Rules method except it was analogous to a round-robin tournament instead of a single-elimination tournament.) The winner was the alternative that won the most pairings.[citation needed]".
- Condorcet_method thumbnail Preferential_ballot.svg?width=300.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink accuratedemocracy.com.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink condorcet.ericgorr.net.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink schulze1.pdf.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink PJ3_VotingSystemsEssay.pdf.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink maximum-majority-voting.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink VoteFairRanking.pm.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink stv.sourceforge.net.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink voteer.com.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink civs.html.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink condorcet.html.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink P5.HTM.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink surveys.html.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink MoulinCh4Elferink.pdf.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink DT1.pdf.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageExternalLink Condorcet_Schulze-PHP_Class.
- Condorcet_method wikiPageID "44446".
- Condorcet_method wikiPageRevisionID "606677709".
- Condorcet_method hasPhotoCollection Condorcet_method.
- Condorcet_method subject Category:Condorcet_methods.
- Condorcet_method subject Category:Preferential_electoral_systems.
- Condorcet_method subject Category:Single-winner_electoral_systems.
- Condorcet_method type Ability105616246.
- Condorcet_method type Abstraction100002137.
- Condorcet_method type Cognition100023271.
- Condorcet_method type CondorcetMethods.
- Condorcet_method type Content105809192.
- Condorcet_method type Idea105833840.
- Condorcet_method type Know-how105616786.
- Condorcet_method type LegalSystem105903229.
- Condorcet_method type Method105660268.
- Condorcet_method type Plan105898568.
- Condorcet_method type PlanOfAction105902545.
- Condorcet_method type PreferentialElectoralSystems.
- Condorcet_method type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Condorcet_method type SingleWinnerElectoralSystems.
- Condorcet_method type System105902872.
- Condorcet_method type VotingSystem105904135.
- Condorcet_method comment "A Condorcet method is any election method that elects the candidate that would win by majority rule in all pairings against the other candidates, whenever one of the candidates has that property. A candidate with that property is called a Condorcet winner (named for the 18th-century French mathematician and philosopher Marie Jean Antoine Nicolas Caritat, the Marquis de Condorcet, who championed such outcomes).".
- Condorcet_method label "Condorcet method".
- Condorcet_method label "Condorcet-Methode".
- Condorcet_method label "Methode Condorcet".
- Condorcet_method label "Metodo Condorcet".
- Condorcet_method label "Méthode Condorcet".
- Condorcet_method label "Método de Condorcet".
- Condorcet_method label "Método de Condorcet".
- Condorcet_method label "孔多塞投票法".
- Condorcet_method sameAs Condorcet-Methode.
- Condorcet_method sameAs Método_de_Condorcet.
- Condorcet_method sameAs Méthode_Condorcet.
- Condorcet_method sameAs Metodo_Condorcet.
- Condorcet_method sameAs Methode_Condorcet.
- Condorcet_method sameAs Método_de_Condorcet.
- Condorcet_method sameAs m.0c3lc.
- Condorcet_method sameAs Q868720.
- Condorcet_method sameAs Q868720.
- Condorcet_method sameAs Condorcet_method.
- Condorcet_method wasDerivedFrom Condorcet_method?oldid=606677709.
- Condorcet_method depiction Preferential_ballot.svg.
- Condorcet_method isPrimaryTopicOf Condorcet_method.