
Life Lessons from Game Theory
The Art of Thinking Strategically in a Complex World
Michael Wooldridge(Author)
Wildfire (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 28. January 2027
Book
Paperback/Softback
336 pages
978-1-0354-0744-6 (ISBN)
Description
'Wooldridge is like the teacher you wish you'd had'
GUARDIAN
'This book is simply brilliant . . . I learned so much'
SIR DAVID SPIEGELHALTER, UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
'Fresh, clever and playful'
MATT RIDLEY, AUTHOR OF THE ORIGINS OF VIRTUE
'Michael explains the complex, strategic structures of our world with masterful beauty'
MILIND TAMBE, HARVARD UNIVERSITY
'Effortlessly covers a broad swath of core ideas in game theory, with a sprinkle of British humour'
EDITH ELKIND, NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY
'A wonderful book'
YOAV SHOHAM, STANFORD UNIVERSITY
______
A fascinating deep-dive into game theory, its history and its practical applications by award-winning expert on computer science and artificial intelligence.
Most of us have some idea about game theory. Concepts like zero-sum games and the prisoner's dilemma crop up in films, novels and casual conversation, often as shorthand for cut-throat competition or inevitable betrayal. But game theory, the science behind these ideas, is widely misunderstood. All too often it's seen solely as the science of conflict and greed. In fact, this field has a lot to teach us about how to make a better world. It shows us just what it takes to enable cooperation and mutual benefit.
This essential primer presents twenty one 'life lessons from game theory', which illustrate the key ideas in the field, and which are packed with real world examples: from overfishing in the Atlantic; to the Cuban Missile Crisis; to security measures at international airports; to advertising wars between major brands. This is a hopeful and practical book that highlights the value of game theory and provides a course correction for its integration into the real world.
GUARDIAN
'This book is simply brilliant . . . I learned so much'
SIR DAVID SPIEGELHALTER, UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
'Fresh, clever and playful'
MATT RIDLEY, AUTHOR OF THE ORIGINS OF VIRTUE
'Michael explains the complex, strategic structures of our world with masterful beauty'
MILIND TAMBE, HARVARD UNIVERSITY
'Effortlessly covers a broad swath of core ideas in game theory, with a sprinkle of British humour'
EDITH ELKIND, NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY
'A wonderful book'
YOAV SHOHAM, STANFORD UNIVERSITY
______
A fascinating deep-dive into game theory, its history and its practical applications by award-winning expert on computer science and artificial intelligence.
Most of us have some idea about game theory. Concepts like zero-sum games and the prisoner's dilemma crop up in films, novels and casual conversation, often as shorthand for cut-throat competition or inevitable betrayal. But game theory, the science behind these ideas, is widely misunderstood. All too often it's seen solely as the science of conflict and greed. In fact, this field has a lot to teach us about how to make a better world. It shows us just what it takes to enable cooperation and mutual benefit.
This essential primer presents twenty one 'life lessons from game theory', which illustrate the key ideas in the field, and which are packed with real world examples: from overfishing in the Atlantic; to the Cuban Missile Crisis; to security measures at international airports; to advertising wars between major brands. This is a hopeful and practical book that highlights the value of game theory and provides a course correction for its integration into the real world.
Reviews / Votes
This book is simply brilliant. Tackling challenging ideas with great clarity and wit, Wooldridge shows that careful analysis of apparently simple games can help us understand momentous world events. I learned so much from reading it (including that my intuition is hopeless). * Sir David Spiegelhalter, Emeritus Professor of Statistics at the University of Cambridge * Wooldridge is like the teacher you wish you'd had: approachable, able to explain difficult things in simple terms, neither dauntingly highbrow nor off-puttingly cool, and genuinely enthusiastic about what he does * GUARDIAN * In Life Lessons from Game Theory, Michael Wooldridge achieves the near-impossible: he explains the complex, strategic structures of our world with masterful beauty and simplicity of writing that is rare for such a deeply researched work. This book is indeed an essential guide for newcomers and even for experts to get a grasp of game theory and it is truly a brilliant contribution to the field. * MILIND TAMBE, Gordon McKay Professor of Computer Science at Harvard University * This very readable book effortlessly covers a broad swath of core ideas in game theory, with a sprinkle of British humour. * EDITH ELKIND, Ginny Rometty Professor of Computer Science at Northwestern University * People presenting game theory tend to fall into one of two camps. The one delves into its rather involved technical details, rendering it inaccessible to a broad public. The other offers lessons from of game theory in a way that doesn't make contact with the actual theory. Wooldridge's wonderful book does neither. It extracts key elements of game (and social choice) theory, presents them faithfully and yet accessibly, and describes their implications to real life in common sense terms. * YOAV SHOHAM, Emeritus Professor of Computer Science at Stanford University * There is no perfect strategy in life because it depends on what other people do. That's the insight - and the challenge - of game theory, one of logic's most fascinating disciplines. Michael Wooldridge's life lessons from game theory are fresh, clever and playful. An absorbing book. * MATT RIDLEY, author of THE ORIGINS OF VIRTUE and BIRDS, SEX AND BEAUTY *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Headline Publishing Group
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (UK-B)
Dimensions
Height: 198 mm
Width: 129 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-0354-0744-6 (9781035407446)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Michael Woodridge is a Professor of Artificial Intelligence at the University of Oxford, where he uses game theory to understand how to build AI agents that can cooperate with each other. He has won national and international awards for research, science communication and scientific leadership. He presented the Royal Institution Christmas Lectures in 2023 and is the author of Artificial Intelligence (2018), part of the Ladybird Expert series, and The Road to Conscious Machines, which was published by Pelican in 2020.