Elections might seem like they produce results people want, but that isn't always the case.This video describes the McKelvey-Schofield Chaos Theorem. To lear...
I think the video is an interesting thought experiment, but I don't know that is holds weight within the scale of the political spectrum. I think while a more progressive viewpoint of the world is by using a 2D map of economical and political leanings, that isn't really the case in real life. People will usually vote along a 1D political line, wherein the entire point of the video falls apart. The choice isn't between 4 quadrants, the choice usually is how left or right something is in a linear scale. On a linear scale, you can't really gamify the policy to work like they describe in the video.
willing to bet none of the people dowvoting actually watched the video
edit: curious to hear what specifically people who are downvoting disagree with in that short 6 min video
I think the video is an interesting thought experiment, but I don't know that is holds weight within the scale of the political spectrum. I think while a more progressive viewpoint of the world is by using a 2D map of economical and political leanings, that isn't really the case in real life. People will usually vote along a 1D political line, wherein the entire point of the video falls apart. The choice isn't between 4 quadrants, the choice usually is how left or right something is in a linear scale. On a linear scale, you can't really gamify the policy to work like they describe in the video.
I think that it does, and there's even a study analyzing many decades of US policy that shows that this is precisely what happens in practice