0.0.9 • Published 5 years ago

public-choice v0.0.9

Weekly downloads
7
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
5 years ago

Published on webcomponents.org

public-choice Web Component

Preliminary public polling web component. Do Not Use In Production.

Demo

Markup for Demo:

  <div>
      <public-choice-jsonblob guid="951c3b69-3e16-4f62-915b-ba3ca33a8e78">
        <span slot="question">Rational choice theories of politics</span>
        <datalist slot="options">
          <option value="Assumes that individuals are naturally irrational and so should not be given a choice in important political decisions"></option>
          <option value="State that only humans are rational and therefore non-humans are not appropriate subjects of politics"></option>
          <option value="Assume that political parties and voters have the utility-maximizing characteristics of actors in the economic sphere"></option>
          <option value="Assume that voters tend to vote for parties based on the charisma of the party leader"></option>
        </datalist>
      </public-choice-jsonblob>

      <public-choice-jsonblob guid="0a924568-fcb7-4387-ae85-91a6fa41f789">
          <span slot="question">'If Option 1 is ranked higher than Option 2, then removing Option 3 should not alter the relative rankings of Options 1 and 2', this is the definition of which property of fairness?</span>
          <datalist slot="options">
            <option value="IIA"></option>
            <option value="Pareto Efficiency"></option>
            <option value="No Dictators"></option>
            <option value="None of These"></option>
            <option value="All of these could be correct."></option>
          </datalist>        
      </public-choice-jsonblob>


      <public-choice-jsonblob guid="d1b5f984-9216-4076-8ba1-36ad54edbc07">
          <span slot="question">Three sets of voters pick between three candidates: 
            <p>30% prefer A to B to C</p>
            <p>40% prefer B to C to A</p>
            <p>30% prefer C to A to B</p>
            <p>Suppose only the first choice counts, so B wins the election.</p>
            <p>However, if C was removed, A would win the election 60% to 40%.</p>
            <p>This is an example of violation of which principle?</p>
          </span>
          <datalist slot="options">
            <option value="Unanimity"></option>
            <option value="No Dicators"></option>
            <option value="IIA"></option>
          </datalist>        
      </public-choice-jsonblob>