Temel Kavramlar
When qualitative assessments of consensus are disputed, a quantitative approach based on voting, viewed as a measurement of agreement, can provide empirical evidence and potentially alleviate gridlock.
Özet
This article investigates the concept of consensus and proposes a shift from qualitative to quantitative definitions, particularly in situations where disagreements arise. It explores various aspects of quantifying consensus, primarily through voting mechanisms, and examines its application in different scenarios.
Qualitative vs. Quantitative Consensus:
- Highlights the limitations of qualitative consensus definitions, which often rely on subjective interpretations of "unity" or "general agreement."
- Proposes a quantitative approach using voting as a measurement tool for consensus, focusing on measurable agreement levels.
Quantifying Consensus:
- Explores different voting methods and their adaptation for measuring consensus, including yes-or-no questions, multiple-choice scenarios, and ranked-order voting.
- Introduces parameters like quorum, effective population size, and thresholds (majority, supermajority, near-unanimity, unanimity) to establish decision rules.
- Provides a detailed analysis of how these parameters interact and influence the determination of consensus.
Measurement Scenarios and Challenges:
- Examines the application of consensus measurement in public elections, committee or group decisions, and social media polls.
- Discusses challenges like ensuring fair ballot access, mitigating obstruction, and avoiding biases inherent in sequential voting.
Uncertainty in Consensus Measurement:
- Acknowledges the inherent uncertainty in any voting process, including sampling uncertainty, voter intent, and potential errors in recording and counting votes.
- Discusses the impact of abstentions and the challenges of interpreting voter silence.
- Briefly touches upon methods used in public elections to mitigate uncertainty, such as audits and fraud prevention measures.
Other Applications of Consensus:
- Briefly mentions the concepts of scientific consensus and consensus values in metrology, distinguishing them from the social consensus measurement discussed in the article.
Conclusion:
- The article advocates for a clear and measurable definition of consensus, especially when qualitative assessments are disputed.
- It emphasizes the importance of understanding the limitations and potential biases of different voting methods and the need for robust procedures to ensure fair and transparent consensus measurement.
İstatistikler
An amendment to the U.S. constitution must be ratified by 3/4 of the states.
Alıntılar
"When unity and cooperation become unobtainable for any reason, measuring consensus as a quantity (an amount of agreement) is a reasonable adaptation to alleviate gridlock and possibly avoid escalation of conflicts."
"Consensus can be determined by a show of hands, humming, or any other means on which the WG agrees (by rough consensus, of course). Note that 51% of the working group does not qualify as ‘rough consensus’ and 99% is better than rough. It is up to the Chair to determine if rough consensus has been reached."
"Choosing concepts such as resistance in a definition of consensus clearly shows how the warfare discourse interacts with, and influences, the consensus discourse. This interaction between the two discourses also makes the definition vague and ambiguous, leaving much room for interpretation; for example: What is an absence of strong resistance? How strong is strong? What are the important subject matters? ... This example shows that even though the consensus discourse was heavily emphasized and communicated to the TC318 members, in practice, this was not the way de jure information security standards were developed. Instead, these best practices were developed by a relatively small group of active members who took it upon themselves to interpret when resistance to a proposal was too strong or was made by an important stakeholder."
"The acceptable error in a public election vote count, as related by some election administrators, is one fewer than the margin of victory."