Arrovian Aggregation Models
AvRussian Academy of Sciences Inst. Control Sciences
Inbunden, Engelska, 1999
Del i serien Theory and Decision Library B
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Beskrivning
Aggregation of individual opinions into a social decision is a problem widely observed in everyday life. For centuries people tried to invent the "best" aggregation rule. In 1951, young American scientist and future Nobel Prize winner Kenneth Arrow formulated the problem in an axiomatic way, in that he specified a set of axioms which every reasonable aggregation rule has to satisfy, and obtained that these axioms are inconsistent. This result, often called Arrow's Paradox or General Impossibility Theorem, had become a cornerstone of social choice theory. The main condition used by Arrow was his famous independence of irrelevant alternatives. This very condition pre-defines the "local" treatment of the alternatives (or pairs of alternatives, or sets of alternatives) in aggregation procedures. Remaining within the framework of the axiomatic approach and based on the consideration of local rules, this book investigates three formulations of the aggregation problem according to the form in which the individual opinions about the alternatives are defined, as well as to the form of desired social decision. In other words, the book looks at three aggregation models.What is common between them is that in all models some analogue of the independence of irrelevant alternatives condition is used, which is why these models are called Arrovian aggregation models. The first chapter presents a general description of the problem of axiomatic synthesis of local rules, and introduces problem formulations for various versions of formalization of individual opinions and collective decision. Chapter two formalizes precisely the notion of "rationality" of individual opinions and social decision, while chapter three deals with the aggregation model for the case of individual opinions and social decisions formalized as binary relations. Chapter four deals with Functional Aggregation Rules which transform into a social choice function individual opinions defined as choice functions. Chapter five considers another model, Social Choice Correspondences, when the individual opinions are formalized as binary relations, and the collective decision is looked for as a choice function.