The bizarre Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem, or Arrow’s Paradox. The bizarre Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem, or Arrow’s Paradox, shows a counterintuitive relationship between fair voting procedures and ...
Zwart and Franssen's impossibility theorem reveals a conflict between the possible-world-based content-definition and the possible-world-based likeness-definition of verisimilitude. In Sect. 2 we show ...
The United States’ 2016 presidential primaries have yielded a bumper crop of commentary from political observers, including speculation of a contested Republican convention, a major third-party ...
In 2018, the U.S. Supreme Court considered a proposed mathematical formula to help detect unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering. We show that in some cases, this formula only flags bizarrely-shaped ...
The air in Bihar is thick with political rhetoric – promises, accusations, and triumphant proclamations fill the space. The poll bugle is all but sounded, and the state’s political landscape, ...
Kenneth Arrow, one of the giants of economics, has died at the age of 95. He became a Nobel Laureate in 1972. As a young lawyer in 1977, I saw him in action as an expert witness on the subject of risk ...