this book has a great chapter on it. I've used this tid-bit to explain immigration, high-trust societies, and why he should apply tit-for-tat (giving everyone the benefit of the doubt, but not letting them run him over) to my nephew.
McKinsey, J.C.C. (2003). Introduction to the Theory of Games. New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-42811-6. (originally publ. McGraw-Hill, 1952)[7]
You just lost the game
Looks shite. I don't really want a math textbook. I mostly want to read on the applications of it in social science, geopolitics etc.
>I want to learn game theory
>I don't want a math book
I've got bad news for you.
It doesn't have any. The sole application of game theory is demonstrating via experiment that humans have a particular cognitive bias.
You are aware Game Theory is a math subfield developed by Mathematicians, right?
Unless you mean meme game theory misunderstood by h*manitiesgays
Oh yea? Give me one game theory equation
I give you a page full of them instead:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cournot_competition
>Recommend me math books that skip all the math.
You have to do the math.
Kinda this, you can't avoid math and expect to be able to abstract all the applications of it.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/game-theory/
This will get you started, check the biography for further stuff.
Thanks, this looks good
How are you so moronic you did not know of this source? A simple google search even reveals it
this book has a great chapter on it. I've used this tid-bit to explain immigration, high-trust societies, and why he should apply tit-for-tat (giving everyone the benefit of the doubt, but not letting them run him over) to my nephew.
McKinsey, J.C.C. (2003). Introduction to the Theory of Games. New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-42811-6. (originally publ. McGraw-Hill, 1952)[7]
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCo_IB5145EVNcf8hw1Kku7w
Game theory 101 is prisoner' s dilemma.
You should try catch-22 or literally anything by P*nchon.
>me
>interested in game theory
>like math
What book did
post?
Books by Ken Binmore are pretty good. You cannot totally avoid maths, at least he tries to limit it to minimum and focus more on intuition.
If you really need to know everything (well, for a graduate course), refer Game Theory by Maschler, Solan and Zamir.