The mathematical method that could offer a fairer way to vote
It allows you to give more support to your preferred outcome
ALICE WAS soaked. So was the Mouse, the Eaglet, the Dodo and all the other bedraggled creatures that emerged from the pool of tears Alice had shed at the bottom of the rabbit-hole. After the Mouse tried talking them out of their sogginess with the “driest” speech he knew, the Dodo proposed “more energetic remedies”. Alice and the animals began racing around a circle, with no start or finish line, and no obvious winner. It was, the Dodo said, a “caucus-race”.
This article appeared in the Christmas Specials section of the print edition under the headline “The public squared”
Christmas Specials December 18th 2021
- A Zimbabwean archaeologist retells the story of a civilisation
- Does good parenting in Hong Kong mean submitting to the Party?
- An economic history of restaurants
- The rise and rise of corrugated iron
- The mathematical method that could offer a fairer way to vote
- How to prevent conflict on the way to Mars
- Scenes from an almost vanished Singapore
- Retracing Julius Caesar’s path through France
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What a town is like when one family runs everything
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The first actors to lose their jobs to artificial intelligence are four-legged
The truth about the passenger jet Putin’s men shot down
Investigating MH17, the crime that presaged the war in Ukraine
Meet the boffins and buccaneers drilling for hydrogen
The search is on for a clean fuel that could one day replace oil
The best sailors in the world
Why the vaka, vehicle for the extraordinary story of the peopling of Oceania, is enjoying a revival
Oceania’s wayfinding skills
The art of getting a vessel and its occupants from one place on a vast ocean to another