Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. intense preferences beliefs and preferences based on strong feelings regarding an issue that someone adheres to over time latent preferences beliefs and preferences people are not deeply committed to and that change over time majority rule a fundamental principle of democracy; the majority should have the power to make decisions binding upon ...

    • Social Choices
    • See Also
    • References

    The "intensity" of preference can be a factor in aggregating individual choices into social choices. 1. Independence of irrelevant alternatives "... does not rule out "intensity" of preference in making social choices. 2. (1) "It is part of our definition of a social choice rule/function that the choices are based only on the information in a profi...

    Arrow, Kenneth J. (1951). Social Choice and Individual Values. New York: John Wiley. OCLC 469063398
    Kelly, Jerry S. (1987). Social Choice Theory: An Introduction. Berlin : Springer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-540-17634-3; OCLC 475917883
  2. People also ask

  3. intense preferences beliefs and preferences based on strong feelings regarding an issue that someone adheres to over time. latent preferences beliefs and preferences people are not deeply committed to and that change over time. partisanship strong support, or even blind allegiance, for a particular political party

  4. elite theory. claims political power rests in the hands of a small, elite group of people. government. the means by which a society organizes itself and allocates authority in order to accomplish collective goals. ideology. the beliefs and ideals that help to shape political opinion and eventually policy. intense preferences.

  5. Jul 17, 2023 · The more money that one has and the more highly educated one is, the more likely one will form intense preferences and take political action. 42 This page titled 1.4: Engagement in a Democracy is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by OpenStax via source content that was edited to the style and standards ...

  6. Abstract. Some decisions require individuals to make judgements rather than to express preferences. Some conflicts of preference arise from different beliefs about the efficacy or propriety of a policy rather than from different wants. Should the ‘intensity’ with which a judgement is made, or a belief is held, figure in decisionmaking in ...

  7. Intensity of preference is a factor in an analysis of how individual choices develop into social choices. Standard election procedures notoriously ignore differences in intensity of preferences. [5] For example, the intensity of preference is a one of many factors which are important in voting. The term is a measure of an individual voter's (or ...

  1. People also search for