"I absolutely loved this book, both as a parent and as a nerd." -Jessica Lahey, author of
The Gift of Failure
Delightfully witty, refreshingly irreverent, and just a bit Machiavellian,
The Game Theorist's Guide to Parenting looks past the fads to offer advice you can put into action today.
As every parent knows, kids are surprisingly clever negotiators. But how can we avoid those all-too-familiar wails of "That's not fair!" and "You can't make me!"? In
The Game Theorist's Guide to Parenting, the award-winning journalist and father of five Paul Raeburn and the game theorist Kevin Zollman pair up to highlight tactics from the worlds of economics and business that can help parents break the endless cycle of quarrels and ineffective solutions. Raeburn and Zollman show that some of the same strategies successfully applied to big business deals and politics-such as the Prisoner's Dilemma and the Ultimatum Game-can be used to solve such titanic, age-old parenting problems as dividing up toys, keeping the peace on long car rides, and sticking to homework routines.
Raeburn and Zollman open each chapter with a common parenting dilemma. Then they show how carefully concocted schemes involving bargains and fair incentives can save the day. Through smart case studies of game theory in action, Raeburn and Zollman reveal how parents and children devise strategies, where those strategies go wrong, and what we can do to help raise happy and savvy kids while keeping the rest of the family happy too.
Sprache
ISBN-13
978-0-374-71440-6 (9780374714406)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Paul Raeburn is the award-winning author of several books, including
Do Fathers Matter?, a National Parenting Publications Gold Medal winner and a Mom's Choice Award winner, and
Acquainted with the Night, a memoir of raising children with mental illness. His articles have appeared in
Discover,
The Huffington Post,
The New York Times Magazine,
Scientific American, and
Psychology Today, among many others. He lives in New York City.
Kevin Zollman is a game theorist and an associate professor of philosophy at Carnegie Mellon University. His work has been covered in
The Wall Street Journal,
The New Yorker,
Scientific American, and elsewhere.