Veritasium

Game theory question: who do you think will win? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mScpH...

vor 3 Monaten | [YT] | 7,333



@Palcious

A person that steals wins in a community of people who don't. A community that shares wins over a community of thieves.

vor 3 Monaten (editiert) | 4,100

@gooseloose682

short term? Stealing, definitely. Long term? Sharing. We have enough to give everyone what they need, greed and selfishness is what brings us down

vor 3 Monaten | 1,300

@tomisinosasona

The paradoxical nature of these opposing ideologies… In an Altruistic society, the Egoist thrives. In an Egoistic society, the Altruist thrives. In an Altruistic society, where everyone is kind, considering and Forgiving, An Egoist, a person who only thinks of themselves and would readily hurt others for their own benefits, would have a field day hurting and manipulating people only to get forgiven and excused for their behaviors leaving them to do it all again endlessly. In an Egoistic society, where everyone would happily backstab their fellow human beings for a piece of bread, the Altruist is invaluable as someone who you can trust and rely on because you know that their actions and words are taken or spoken wholly for your benefit without a sense of malice or ulterior motives in a world where deception is always the word of the day. In a mixed world however filled with people of varying degrees, neither is the best. The ideology that stands out is “tit for tat” which, also paradoxically, is the ideology most put down by philosophers and religious groups (an eye for an eye would make the world go blind.

vor 2 Monaten | 30

@markellison2152

One of the most important sayings that I have ever heard is this: cheaters CAN "win", but they CAN'T prosper.

vor 3 Monaten | 179

@Asaelus

This vastly determines on a definition of "winning" [what], but as someone else has commented, working cooperatively is definitely better for long term growth and sharing of resources. (If winning means accumulating more wealth/resources than what you started with)

vor 3 Monaten | 2,000

@NomadMao

Best long term strategy: share at first, then reciprocate the opponent’s previous move.

vor 3 Monaten | 281

@thomaswalsh4552

This is almost entirely dependent on the setting, and how the theft/sharing is done. The channel “Primer” would be disappointed in the simplicity of this question

vor 3 Monaten | 28

@chrisnolan8263

One of the best video

vor 2 Monaten | 14

@bluepilkinton-ching3335

"Someone who cheats in Monopoly is going to be richer than those who follow the rules."

vor 3 Monaten (editiert) | 113

@XbotOfficialYT

But hey, that's just a theory. A game theory.

vor 2 Monaten | 16

@_joanrios

In my experience playing competitive board games, the winning players tend to be those who have great alliances. In contrast, those who decide upon isolation, always end up in a clear disadvantage.

vor 3 Monaten | 4

@MeDoMeer

So what I get from this poll is that if everyone in a community would steal about 25% of the time, the community would be the most thriving?

vor 2 Monaten | 0

@gasparsigma

I guess in theory the individual who steals, unless they get caught and punished, will win. On a population level, sharing because if stealing was accepted it'd not be sustainable.

vor 3 Monaten | 10

@Theboy18403

What I think is in a society where people are sharing the thief who steal and gets away with it (like many politicians) will earn more whereas a society where everyone is a thief will lose to a sharing society

vor 3 Monaten | 10

@T2and3

I'm going to guess it's one of those paradoxical answers, where stealing is good for the individual, but for the community as a while, sharing is better.

vor 2 Monaten | 0

@agn4121

This largely depends, if we're talking short term game with few types of resources then stealing because you're directly slowing down the growth of your competitor while increasing your own. Especially for 1v1 games. However, if we're looking at a game with more than 2 players and more than one resource type that continues for a while then it is definitely sharing.

vor 2 Monaten | 1

@theowang4306

To steal or not to steal? It’s a question!

vor 3 Monaten | 45

@Gams619

Mat Pat

vor 3 Monaten | 23

@Kevbotomy

It depends on what defines "winning" in the minds of the participants. If a participant is selfish, stealing is more likely to lead to "winning" but for a united team, sharing is more important.

vor 3 Monaten | 0

@lrmackmcbride7498

It depends on definitions not included in the problem including number of iterations snd odds of getting caught as well as value of what is shared or stolen.

vor 2 Monaten | 0