diff options
| author | Silvio Rhatto <rhatto@riseup.net> | 2020-01-02 22:31:38 -0300 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Silvio Rhatto <rhatto@riseup.net> | 2020-01-02 22:31:38 -0300 | 
| commit | 22385f36552bf6b1af93f7422c45a24468b2b49f (patch) | |
| tree | aea0b9f8f358a7b4513d0ec6c764b0cccdbdc240 /books | |
| parent | 0cd05460a184260658b1ebce48eca3342d02d0ad (diff) | |
| download | blog-22385f36552bf6b1af93f7422c45a24468b2b49f.tar.gz blog-22385f36552bf6b1af93f7422c45a24468b2b49f.tar.bz2 | |
Updates economics
Diffstat (limited to 'books')
| -rw-r--r-- | books/economics/game-theory-critical-introduction.md | 40 | 
1 files changed, 40 insertions, 0 deletions
| diff --git a/books/economics/game-theory-critical-introduction.md b/books/economics/game-theory-critical-introduction.md index 012c9ea..6b34244 100644 --- a/books/economics/game-theory-critical-introduction.md +++ b/books/economics/game-theory-critical-introduction.md @@ -448,3 +448,43 @@ resolution would require a higher State in the next upper level of recursion:      should agree to submit to the authority of a higher State which will enforce an      agreement to disar m (an argument for a strong, independent, United      Nations?). + +Nash-equilibrium: self-confirming strategy: + +    A set of rationalisable strategies (one for each player) are in a Nash +    equilibrium if their implementation confirms the expectations of each player +    about the other’s choice.  Put differently, Nash strategies are the only +    rationalisable ones which, if implemented, confirm the expectations on which +    they were based. This is why they are often referred to as self-confirming +    strategies or why it can be said that this equilibrium concept requires that +    players’ beliefs are consistently aligned (CAB). + +    -- 53 + +Arguments agains CAB: + +    In the same spirit, it is sometimes argued (borrowing a line from John von +    Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern) that the objective of any analysis of games is +    the equivalent of writing a book on how to play games; and the minimum +    condition which any piece of advice on how to play a game must satisfy is +    simple: the advice must remain good advice once the book has been published. +    In other words, it could not really be good advice if people would not want to +    follow it once the advice was widely known. On this test, only (R2, C2) pass, +    since when the R player follows the book’s advice, the C player would want to +    follow it as well, and vice versa. The same cannot be said of the other +    rationalisable strategies. For instance, suppose (R1, C1) was recommended: then +    R would not want to follow the advice when C is expected to follow it by +    selecting C1 and likewise, if R was expected to follow the advice, C would not +    want to. +     +    Both versions of the argument with respect to what mutual rationality entails +    seem plausible. Yet, there is something odd here. Does respect for each other’s +    rationality lead each person to believe that neither will make a mistake in a +    game? Anyone who has talked to good chess players (perhaps the masters of +    strategic thinking) will testify that rational persons pitted against equally +    rational opponents (whose rationality they respect) do not immediately assume +    that their opposition will never make errors. On the contrary, the point in +    chess is to engender such errors! Are chess players irrational then?  One is +    inclined to answer no, but why? And what is the difference as + +    -- 57 | 
