Trick #6
Thursday, 05 October 2017
In prior articles, we wrote about the natural desire to prevail against perceived rivals and the potential use of game theory to understand obstacles in the current legal system as it takes families through parental separations and divorce. We next focused on how the legal system begins to trick people into self-defeating patterns of decision
- Published in Game Theory Blog
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Trick #5
Thursday, 05 October 2017
In prior articles, we wrote about the natural desire to prevail against perceived rivals and the potential use of game theory to understand obstacles in the current legal system as it takes families through parental separations and divorce. We next focused on how the legal system begins to trick people into self-defeating patterns of decision
- Published in Game Theory Blog
Trick #4
Thursday, 05 October 2017
In prior articles, we wrote about the natural desire to prevail against perceived rivals and the potential use of game theory to understand obstacles in the current legal system as it takes families through parental separations and divorce. We next began to focus on how the legal system begins to trick people into self-defeating patterns
- Published in Game Theory Blog
Trick #3
Thursday, 05 October 2017
“The other side wants . . .!” In prior blogs we focused on the fact that while people are rational, they can be tricked and on two of the tricks in the traditional family law legal system: legal outcomes are goals; and divorce is a zero sum game. The third trick is convincing people that
- Published in Game Theory Blog