Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: Games of Strategy

Author: Avinash K. Dixit
Year: 1999
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 1.1
Genres/categories: Economics, Non Fiction, Business

Purchase/research links:
All introductory textbooks begin by attempting to convince the student readers that the subject is of great importance in the world, and therefore merits their attention. The physical sciences and engineering claim to be the basis of modern technology and therefore of modern life; the social sciences discuss big issues of governance, for example, democracy and taxation; the humanities claim that they revive your soul after it has been deadened by exposure to the physical and social sciences and to engineering. Where does the subject "games of strategy," often also called game theory, fit into this picture, and why should you study it? Dixit and Skeath's Games of Strategy offers a practical motivation much more individual and closer to your personal concerns than most other subjects. You play games of strategy all the time: with your parents, siblings, friends, enemies, even with your professors. You have probably acquired a lot of instinctive expertise, and we hope you will recognize in what follows some of the lessons you have already learned. This book's authors will build on this experience, systematize it, and develop it to the point where you will be able to improve your strategic skills and use them more methodically. Opportunities for such uses will appear throughout the rest of your life; you will go on playing such games with your employers, employees, spouses, children, and even strangers.
Not that the subject lacks wider importance. Similar games are played in business, politics, diplomacy, wars--in fact, whenever people interact to strike mutually agreeable deals or to resolve conflicts. Being able to recognize such games will enrich your understanding of the world around you, and will make you a better participant in all its affairs.
Similar books:

Thinking Strategically
by Avinash K. Dixit

The Undercover Economist
by Tim Harford

Hedge Fund Market Wizards
by Jack D. Schwager

The Little Book That Beats the Market
by Joel Greenblatt

Come Into My Trading Room
by Alexander Elder

Trade Your Way to Financial Freedom
by Van K. Tharp

Options, Futures and Other Derivatives
by John C. Hull

The Intelligent Asset Allocator
by William J. Bernstein

Adaptive Markets
by Andrew W. Lo

Option Volatility & Pricing
by Sheldon Natenberg

The Armchair Economist
by Steven E. Landsburg

The New Geography of Jobs
by Enrico Moretti

Common Sense Economics
by James D. Gwartney

The Zurich Axioms
by Max Gunther

Inside the House of Money
by Steven Drobny

Portfolios of the Poor
by Daryl Collins

What Works on Wall Street
by James P. O'Shaughnessy

The Shareholder Value Myth
by Lynn A. Stout

The Truth About Markets
by John Kay

The Nature of Economies
by Jane Jacobs