On fixed point theorems and social choice paradoxes
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Publication:908824
DOI10.1016/0165-1765(79)90009-0zbMath0693.90008OpenAlexW3123829701MaRDI QIDQ908824
Publication date: 1979
Published in: Economics Letters (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0165-1765(79)90009-0
nonexistencefixed point theoremsunanimityimpossibility theoremcontinuous and anonymous rulesocial choice paradoxes
Related Items (17)
The Moebius strip and a social choice paradox ⋮ The topological approach to the aggregation of preferences ⋮ On the equivalence of the Arrow impossibility theorem and the Brouwer fixed point theorem when individual preferences are weak orders ⋮ On the topological equivalence of the Arrow impossibility theorem and Amartya Sen's liberal paradox ⋮ A topological approach to Wilson's impossibility theorem ⋮ A reformulation of Chichilnisky's impossibility theorem ⋮ Topological social choice: Reply to Le Breton and Uriarte ⋮ AGGREGATION OF PREFERENCES IN CRISP AND FUZZY SETTINGS: FUNCTIONAL EQUATIONS LEADING TO POSSIBILITY RESULTS ⋮ Continuous selections from the Pareto correspondence and non-manipulability in exchange economies ⋮ A topological approach to the Arrow impossibility theorem when individual preferences are weak orders ⋮ On the equivalence of the Arrow impossibility theorem and the Brouwer fixed point theorem ⋮ Abstract aggregations and proximity preservation: an impossibility result ⋮ A topological proof of Eliaz's unified theorem of social choice theory ⋮ THE HEX GAME THEOREM AND THE ARROW IMPOSSIBILITY THEOREM: THE CASE OF WEAK ORDERS ⋮ Topological social choice ⋮ Utility functions for Debreu's 'excess demands' ⋮ Anonymity and continuous social choice
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