Game Theory and the Social Contract: Just playing

Portada
MIT Press, 1994 - 620 páginas

In Volume 1 of Game Theory and the Social Contract, Ken Binmore restated the problems of moral and political philosophy in the language of game theory. In Volume 2, Just Playing, he unveils his own controversial theory, which abandons the metaphysics of Immanuel Kant for the naturalistic approach to morality of David Hume. According to this viewpoint, a fairness norm is a convention that evolved to coordinate behavior on an equilibrium of a society's Game of Life. This approach allows Binmore to mount an evolutionary defense of Rawls's original position that escapes the utilitarian conclusions that follow when orthodox reasoning is applied with the traditional assumptions. Using ideas borrowed from the theory of bargaining and repeated games, Binmore is led instead to a form of egalitarianism that vindicates the intuitions that led Rawls to write his Theory of Justice.Written for an interdisciplinary audience, Just Playing offers a panoramic tour through a range of new and disturbing insights that game theory brings to anthropology, biology, economics, philosophy, and psychology. It is essential reading for anyone who thinks it likely that ethics evolved along with the human species.

 

Contenido

Series Foreword
xvii
Acknowledgment
xxiv
Nuances of Negotiation
59
2
112
The Alternating Offers Game
122
Evolution in Eden
145
Rationalizing Reciprocity
263
6
344
Yearning for Utopia
375
Appendices
511
145
555
513
574
5
581
Derechos de autor

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Información bibliográfica