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'Packed with fresh and clear insights that will change the way you
think about the world' Uri Gneezy 'One of those books that you pick
up and then can't put down' Steve Stewart-Williams 'This is a book
I will come back to again and again' Nichola Raihani How game
theory - the ultimate theory of rationality - explains irrational
behaviour. In Hidden Games, MIT economists Moshe Hoffman and Erez
Yoeli find a surprising middle ground between the hyperrationality
of classical economics and the hyper-irrationality of behavioural
economics. They call it hidden games. Reviving game theory, Hoffman
and Yoeli use it to explain our most puzzling behaviour, from the
mechanics of Stockholm syndrome and internalised misogyny to why we
help strangers and have a sense of fairness. Fun and powerfully
insightful, Hidden Games is an eye-opening argument for using game
theory to explain all the irrational things we think, feel, and do
and will change how you think forever.
'Packed with fresh and clear insights that will change the way you
think about the world' Uri Gneezy 'One of those books that you pick
up and then can't put down' Steve Stewart-Williams 'This is a book
I will come back to again and again' Nichola Raihani How game
theory - the ultimate theory of rationality - explains irrational
behaviour. In Hidden Games, MIT economists Moshe Hoffman and Erez
Yoeli find a surprising middle ground between the hyperrationality
of classical economics and the hyper-irrationality of behavioural
economics. They call it hidden games. Reviving game theory, Hoffman
and Yoeli use it to explain our most puzzling behaviour, from the
mechanics of Stockholm syndrome and internalised misogyny to why we
help strangers and have a sense of fairness. Fun and powerfully
insightful, Hidden Games is an eye-opening argument for using game
theory to explain all the irrational things we think, feel, and do
and will change how you think forever.
'Packed with fresh and clear insights that will change the way you
think about the world' Uri Gneezy 'One of those books that you pick
up and then can't put down' Steve Stewart-Williams 'This is a book
I will come back to again and again' Nichola Raihani How game
theory - the ultimate theory of rationality - explains irrational
behaviour. In Hidden Games, MIT economists Moshe Hoffman and Erez
Yoeli find a surprising middle ground between the hyperrationality
of classical economics and the hyper-irrationality of behavioural
economics. They call it hidden games. Reviving game theory, Hoffman
and Yoeli use it to explain our most puzzling behaviour, from the
mechanics of Stockholm syndrome and internalised misogyny to why we
help strangers and have a sense of fairness. Fun and powerfully
insightful, Hidden Games is an eye-opening argument for using game
theory to explain all the irrational things we think, feel, and do
and will change how you think forever.
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