T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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852.2 | What's the game & who're the players? | HANDY::MALLETT | Barking Spider Industries | Wed Sep 27 1989 14:29 | 5 |
| With only that little information to go on, I guess I'd start
to check out other towns. Can you be a little more specific,
Jim?
Steve
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852.3 | I'm not sure I've ever seen a straight game... | STAR::RDAVIS | It's just like Sister Ray said | Wed Sep 27 1989 14:29 | 8 |
| If I had to play (and it usually seems that I have to), I still
wouldn't consciously cheat. Not from ethical considerations, but just
because I'm bad at it. (: >,)
Depending on the complexity of the game, "cheating" can become a pretty
vague concept, though!
Ray
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852.4 | Maybe we are already playing and should be cheating | PENUTS::JLAMOTTE | J & J's Memere | Wed Sep 27 1989 15:23 | 1 |
| Sometimes it seems like all the 'games' are crooked....
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852.5 | Change the game by starting to play another one | HANNAH::SICHEL | Life on Earth, let's not blow it! | Wed Sep 27 1989 21:53 | 10 |
| Cheat: the act of fraudulently deceiving...
intentional active distortion of the truth
If the game was crooked, I think I would try to change the game
by starting to play another one (let's agree on fair rules).
If one truely understands the concept of "system" (I'm not claiming
to fully understand this), cheating is not a dominant strategy.
- Peter
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852.6 | More questions than answers | APEHUB::RON | | Wed Sep 27 1989 22:21 | 34 |
|
RE: .5
> If the game was crooked, I think I would try to change the
> game by starting to play another one (let's agree on fair
> rules).
But often, you don't get a chance to set the rules. Accepting that
this is really 'the only game in town' you'd either play the game as
is, or not at all.
But, if cheating is an inherent part of the rule set (as the base
hypothesis seems to imply), would it make sense to play the game
WITHOUT cheating? One will be guaranteed to lose. Would it then be a
game, or just an exercise in futility?
Further, is there anything wrong in cheating under these conditions?
In other words, does it make sense to apply the rules of other
games, from other towns (such as fairness, honesty, etc.) to a game
based on a different value set? Does it make sense to apply foreign
moral rules to a system where they will be anachronistic?
> If one truly understands the concept of "system" (I'm not
> claiming to fully understand this), cheating is not a
> dominant strategy.
I think I understand the mathematical concept of 'system' (in the
sense of a mapping function). Apparently, this is not what you mean
here. How does one's understanding of 'system' affect their choice
of a dominant strategy? Could you elaborate?
-- Ron
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852.7 | I'm Trump's illegitimate son | FDCV30::THOMPSON | You want me to do What !! | Thu Sep 28 1989 02:28 | 7 |
|
First I would ask myself "What would Donald Trump do"
Then I would play the game as best as I could just like Donald
Steve
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852.8 | The Art of the Spoiled Rich Kid | STAR::RDAVIS | It's just like Sister Ray said | Thu Sep 28 1989 10:34 | 3 |
| Donald Trump would buy the game and name it after himself.
At which point, I _would_ move to another town.
|
852.9 | | CSSE32::LESLIE | Andy ��� Leslie, VMS CSSE | Thu Sep 28 1989 11:14 | 5 |
| No
No
There is always a choice. It just may not be obvious.
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852.10 | Maybe?! | IAMOK::GRAY | Follow a hawk. When it circles, you ... | Thu Sep 28 1989 11:14 | 31 |
|
.0> If the only game in town was crooked, would you play?
If I lost nothing, then whether or not there was a chance to gain
anything wouldn't matter and I might play for fun.
.0> Would you cheat, to 'even the scores'?
If I lost nothing, and whether I played or not was optional, no.
IMO, cheating is a short term win, but in the long run you lose
overall.
.0> What if you didn't have the choice not to play?
Anxiety!
If I have no choice, then there must have been some serious
ultimatume (Sp?) given. I have something to lose!? The game is
unfair so winning will be difficult, even if I cheat.
a. Get on the next stage out of town, because living like this
can't be fun.
b. If (not a)
then "Play the game, with the understanding that there are
no rules so, whatever I'm doing is not cheating and
not playing either"
until I can do (a).
Richard
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852.11 | | CONCRT::SHAW | | Thu Sep 28 1989 11:24 | 11 |
| If the game is crooked and all the participants are cheating, then what are the
rules for? Isn't cheating then part of the rules and acceptible if you don't
get caught? The "rule" to follow is that anything goes unless you are caught.
What is the penalty for being caught cheating?
I would certainly consider cheating in a crooked game, it would be foolish not
to. I would only play if I thought I would have a fair chance. If it took
cheating for me to have a "fair" chance, then I would cheat.
Stan
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852.12 | Play the flip side... | SALEM::MELANSON | nut at work | Thu Sep 28 1989 12:35 | 8 |
| If it's crooked it was probably meant to be.
Play the flip side of it, such that it's honest
for you, you've beaten the cheats objective
that is to have gained by cheating you. In
which case you are not playing his/her game
but they play yours.
jm
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852.13 | negativity begets negativity | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Thu Sep 28 1989 14:45 | 5 |
| I dunno. I'd either learn how they cheated and play to win like
they do, or I'd torch the place.
-Jody
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852.14 | Cheating is bad karma | HANNAH::SICHEL | Life on Earth, let's not blow it! | Fri Sep 29 1989 00:49 | 46 |
| re .5 & .6
>> If the game was crooked, I think I would try to change the
>> game by starting to play another one (let's agree on fair
>> rules).
>
>But often, you don't get a chance to set the rules. Accepting that
>this is really 'the only game in town' you'd either play the game as
>is, or not at all.
I'm basically saying no, I wouldn't play the game as given.
I realize this will sound like I'm avoiding the question,
but in reality, there's never only one game. There's at
least two: the game itself, and a meta-game of determining
under what conditions you are willing to play (that is, the
rules of the game). Often the meta-game is more important
than the game itself. Why concede this a priori?
Perhaps my first move in the meta-game would be to announce
I'm not willing to play the game as given. This might mean I
don't play at all, so be it, but in my experience, it usually
begins a whole new game involving negotiation.
Even when you are in a very weak position, the other party has
some interest in your cooperation, otherwise there wouldn't be
a game at all.
re: "system" and "dominant strategy"
By system, I mean everything that forms a unified whole.
Not just what is stated, but the entire context.
A dominant strategy is one that will produce an outcome as good
or better than all other strategies, regardless of the strategy
adopted by an opponent.
I believe if one truely comprehends the whole system,
cheating is not a dominant strategy. You won't really
get ahead in the long run.
This is what "karma" is meant to express. ["Myths and dreams
come from the same place. They come from realizations of some kind
that have then to find expression in symbolic form", Joseph Campbell,
"The Power of Myth".]
- Peter
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852.15 | < A FLEA-ISM > | PATS::CONTI | Glory days | Thu Oct 05 1989 16:00 | 6 |
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CHEATERS NEVER LOOSE
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852.16 | Who has a Monopoly of HEADGAMES ? | BTOVT::BOATENG_K | Q'BIKAL X'PANSIONS | Thu Oct 05 1989 16:48 | 7 |
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LOOSERS NEVER CHEAT
Wanna win ? Then, keep on keepin' on.
(the wanzam)
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852.17 | Crime doen't pay, much | SOURCE::KISER | Wishing you were here | Thu Oct 12 1989 07:51 | 4 |
|
A CHEATER ISN'T A CHEATER UNTIL THEY ARE CAUGHT THEN THEIR DEAD
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852.18 | Miller would love this one... | HARDY::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Fri Oct 13 1989 22:22 | 29 |
|
This reminds me of analogy tests from philosophy 401 [grin]..
the logic goes something like this...
If cheating is a rule of the game [premise #1..stated in .0]
And if cheating is defined as breaking the rules [premise #2..a
standard, allowable interpretation of the language]
Query?: What is cheating [a mere variance of the question "would you
cheat?"]
The "trick" is that eveyone explains why you should not cheat based on
their beliefs...not on the information presented...right answer, wrong
question.
The "logical" answer [not the "right" one...we are taking boolean
analogy here...] is that of course you would. If you were *not* to
cheat [ie: follow the rules established for the game] then you would in
effect be *cheating*...by breaking the rules...sort of like double
entendres...
Anyone ever taken the Miller Analogies Test? It is 100 unembellished
analogies based on this type of logic...sometimes required for entrance
to some graduate schools...average score nation-wide last time I saw
results was 44 "right" [logically correct]...it's a b***-buster!
Mel
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