I believe @Lol4t0 is pretty much correct, but I'd state things much more strongly. If you allowed this, you'd end up with two possibilities: either make a lot of other changes throughout almost the entirety of the language, or else you end up with something almost completely broken.
The other changes you'd make to allow this to work would be to completely revamp how overloading is done -- you'd have to change at least the order of the steps that were taken, and probably the details of the steps themselves. Right now, the compiler looks up the name, then forms an overload set, resolves the overload, then checks access to the chosen overload.
To make this work even sort of well, you'd pretty much have to change that to check access first, and only add accessible functions to the overload set. With that, at least the example in @Lol4t0's answer could continue to compile, because Base::foo would never be added to the overload set.
That still means, however, that adding to the interface of the base class could cause serious problems. If Base didn't originally contain foo, and a public foo were added, then the call in main to d.foo() would suddenly do something entirely different, and (again) it would be entirely outside the control of whoever wrote Derived.
To cure that, you'd just about have to make a fairly fundamental change in the rules: prohibit implicit conversions of function arguments. Along with that, you'd change overload resolution so in case of a tie, the most derived/most local version of a function was favored over a less derived/outer scope. With those rules, the call to d.foo(5.0) could never resolve to Derived::foo(int) in the first place.
That, however, would only leave two possibilities: either calls to free functions would have different rules than calls to member functions (implicit conversions allowed only for free functions) or else all compatibility with C would be discarded entirely (i.e., also prohibit implicit conversions in all function arguments, which would break huge amounts of existing code).
To summarize: to change this without breaking the language entirely, you'd have to make quite a few other changes as well. It would almost certainly be possible to create a language that worked that way, but by the time you were done it wouldn't be C++ with one minor change -- it would be an entirely different language that wasn't much like C++ or C, or much of anything else.
BaseandDerivedused different arguments tofoo, so the signatures should have been different (not a "true" override). – user315052 Aug 12 '12 at 16:52