@inbook{44a5ff0b6b9b4917b14cfc60c101294f,
title = "Aggregation of value judgments differs from aggregation of preferences",
abstract = "My focus is on aggregation of individual value rankings of alternatives to a collective value ranking. This is compared with aggregation o individual prefrences to a collective preference. While in an individual preference ranking the alternatives are ordered in accordance with one{\textquoteright}s preferences, the order in a value ranking expresses one{\textquoteright}s comparative evaluation of the alternatives, from the best to the worst. I suggest that, despite their formal similarity as rankings, this difference in the nature of individual inputs in two aggregation scenarios has important implications: The kind of procedure that looks fine for aggregation of judgments is inappropriate for aggregation of preferences. The procedure I have in mind consists in similarity maximization, or – more precisely – in minimization of the average distance from individual inputs. When applied to judgment aggregation, this procedure can also be approached from the epistemic perspective: the questions are posed concerning its advantages as a truth-tracker. From that perspective, what matters is not only the probability of the outcome of the procedure being true, but also the expected verisimilitude of the outcome: its expected distance from truth.",
keywords = "value, preference, ranking, similarity, distance-based methods, aggregation, truth-tracking",
author = "Wlodek Rabinowicz",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1163/9789004312654\_003",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-900431910-3",
series = "Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities",
publisher = "Brill Rodopi",
pages = "9--40",
booktitle = "ncovering Facts and Values: Studies in Contemporary Epistemology and Political Philosophy",
}