Competition: The Birth of a New Science - Softcover

9780809035786: Competition: The Birth of a New Science
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What do chess-playing computer programs, biological evolution, competitive sports, gambling, alternative voting systems, public auctions, corporate globalization, and class warfare have in common? All are manifestations of a new paradigm in scientific thinking, one that the author calls "the emerging science of competition." Drawing in part on the pioneering work of mathematicians such as John von Neumann, John Nash (of A Beautiful Mind fame), and Robert Axelrod, James Case explores the common game-theoretical strands that tie these seemingly unrelated fields together, showing how each can be better understood in the shared light of the others. Not since James Gleick's bestselling book Chaos brought widespread public attention to the new sciences of chaos and complexity has a general-interest science book served such an eye-opening purpose. Competition will appeal to a wide range of readers, from policy wonks and futurologists to former jocks and other ordinary citizens seeking to make sense of a host of novel―and frequently controversial―issues.

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About the Author:

James Case holds a PhD from the University of Michigan, has taught at a number of universities and worked in private industry, and is the regular book reviewer for SIAM News of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics.

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Preface

 

Competition is a surprisingly difficult concept even to define. Modern lexicographers have failed repeatedly to improve on the definition given by Samuel Johnson in his 1755 work Dictionary of the English Language. In it he declares “competition” to be a noun meaning “the act of endeavoring to gain what another endeavors to gain at the same time; rivalry; contest.” Yet even this definition is unacceptably narrow, since it limits to two the number of admissible competitors. Auctions, spelling bees, primary elections, horse races, and track and field events, as well as golf, tennis, and bowling tournaments, typically allow large numbers of hopefuls to compete. At the very least, Dr. Johnson’s definition should be amended to read “what others endeavor to gain.”

 

     Like solitaire, crosswords, picture-, and other sorts of puzzles may be viewed as single-player games. All such games can, in principle, be solved mathematically. Although it might take the fastest conceivable computer millions of years to crack a particularly difficult puzzle, it is at least possible to define what is meant by a solution, and to specify the steps a computer would have to perform in order to find one. The same cannot be said of contests open to three or more competitors, since there is no universally accepted definition of a solution. As a result, leading authorities can disagree as to which, if any, of several proposed solutions for a particular many-player game is valid.

 

     Two-player games can go either way. Those of the “zero-sum” variety, in which the winner wins only what the loser loses, are almost as solvable as puzzles and solitaire. Those that are not zero-sum are nearly as insoluble as many-player games. It is indeed unfortunate that the forms of competition that most directly affect human welfare—such as wars and commercial competition—are rarely zero-sum, and typically involve more than two competing factions. It is worth noting that, whenever many-player games such as Scrabble and Monopoly are contested at the tournament level, the rules are altered to transform them into two-player zero-sum games. Many-player and non-zero-sum games are simply too confusing for tournament play. With three or more players, there would be no end of complaints from alleged victims of collusion.

 

     It was not until 1944 that John von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern developed a truly workable definition of competition. It took them an entire chapter of their groundbreaking Theory of Games and Economic Behavior to explain what they had done. From the realization that a game is—for analytical purposes—nothing more than a book of rules, they distilled a concise (if forbiddingly technical) definition of a game. Only gradually did it become clear that all forms of competition can be made, with but little modification, to fit their definition. Indeed, more than sixty years after they wrote, no one has identified a form of competition that seems incompatible with the von Neumann–Morgenstern definition of a game. In 1950, Harold Kuhn developed the simpler and more graphic, yet logically equivalent, form of that definition to be found in Chapter 3. Though dictionaries may never include the entry “com’pe ti’tion (kom’pê tish9’un), n. See game,” the emerging science of competition has yet to discover anything suggesting that such an entry would be misleading.

 

     You won’t find many departments of competition science listed alongside those of physics, chemistry, and food science in the catalogs of leading colleges and universities. There is as yet no Journal of Competition Science, nor any Society of Competition Scientists. Perhaps there never will be. Leaders in the field seem content to regard themselves as biologists, psychologists, computer scientists, statisticians, economists, mathematicians, and highway engineers. Yet all are keenly aware of the similarity between the mental gymnastics required of chess players, political consultants, military strategists, corporate planners, and others who compete for a living. Perhaps this book will alert them to the fact that the makings of a genuine and very practical science lie scattered throughout the literature of the decision sciences.

 

     By far the most spectacular achievement of the new science has been the defeat of world chess champion Garry Kasparov by the IBM computer Deep Blue. There have, however, been plenty of other stirring victories. Computers now dominate the strongest human players of many familiar board games, as well as games encountered in the military, in commerce, and in government.

 

     That’s the good news. The bad news is that competition science is inescapably mathematical—all but impossible to explain in wholly nonmathematical terms. Though every effort has been made to minimize the number of pages infected with mathematical symbolism, I know not how to eliminate them all. What math remains is presented mainly in graphical form, since many readers find pictures less daunting than equations.

 

     The most notable conquests of man by machine have made less use of mathematical game theory than of systematic experiment. Every computer chess, checkers, or backgammon tournament ever played, as well as every game of any kind between man and machine, has constituted a potentially telling experiment. It is impossible to count the number of such experiments conducted since the dawn of the computer age, or the number of once-plausible hypotheses rejected in the process.

 

     Einstein once expressed the opinion that the “Development of Western Science is based on two great achievements: the invention of the formal logical system (in Euclidean geometry) by the Greek philosophers, and the discovery of the possibility to find out causal relationships by systematic experiment (Renaissance).” Only after combining the two did Western Science initiate the four centuries of ever-accelerating material progress that history now records. And only after experimental methods began to complement a priori mathematical reasoning was significant progress made against the more challenging board games, like chess and checkers.

 

     The first part of the book explains the nature and sources of man’s existing knowledge of competition, while the second—lengthier and more controversial—explores economic competition. The latter, it will be argued, bears little resemblance to the carefully choreographed minuet described in books on the subject and too often relied upon to assert the will of the consumer. Indeed “consumer sovereignty” is but one of several colossal fictions enshrined in “mainstream economic theory.” The central thesis of that vast oversimplification holds that something called “perfect competition” compels free markets to allocate “scarce resources” in a manner so “efficient” that all of mankind’s conflicting wants and needs are resolved in the most satisfactory manner possible. On paper, all free markets work in more or less the same way.

 

     In practice, most appear to work very differently, both from one another and from the way they are all said to work. Perhaps that’s why so much “jawboning” is required to convince the public that things are not as they seem, but as free market logic commands them to be. Does it seem unwise to eliminate the inheritance tax on the superrich? Free market principles uphold the wisdom of such reform. Does it seem heartless to depress the minimum wage? Free market evangelists portray it as an act of compassion. Does it seem counterproductive to outsource American manufacturing jobs? Free market ideologues depict outsourcing as a subsidy to the lower middle class. And so on. It will be argued presently that the more preposterous claims of orthodox economic theory are direct consequences of expert willingness to conflate actual with perfect competition.

 

     Unbeknownst to the public, numerous schools of “heterodox” economic thought dispute orthodox teachings. For a variety of reasons, they denounce mainstream (orthodox, neoclassical) economic thought as the worst kind of pseudoscience, in which the main conclusions were already in place by the dawn of the nineteenth century, leaving nothing more to modern scholarship than the discovery (read “fabrication”) of ever more elaborate (read “abstract mathematical”) justifications. The final chapters of the book will describe a few of the more active schools of heterodox economic thought, explain the faults they find with orthodox theory, and explore the policy implications of proposed amendments.

 

     I hope the book will appeal to the entire scientific community, from career scientists to the most casual watcher o...

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  • PublisherHill and Wang
  • Publication date2008
  • ISBN 10 0809035782
  • ISBN 13 9780809035786
  • BindingPaperback
  • Number of pages368
  • Rating

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