Throughout chapter 12 Dawkins carefully
explains and analyzes a game called Prisoner’s dilemma. The game consists on
having to options: either choosing to cooperate or to defect with your opponent/partner,
none of the players may see the action chosen beforehand and therefore they
must wait until the turn ends. If both cooperate then each receives an equal
reward, if both defect each receives a lesser reward or even a punishment. However
if one defects and the other chooses to cooperate, the one who defected earns a
greater reward than if both cooperated and the one who foolishly cooperated
gets the worst reward or punishment. Through this game Dawkins analyzed human behavior
and selfishness using various scenarios. For instance, let’s take the prisoner’s
one: if two men have been accused of murder but not enough evidence has been
collected all the authorities may rely on is that both suspects tell on each
other. Before they can make any agreement each is brought to the interrogation
room separately, as the interrogation
develops both men betray each other and present substantial evidence that gets
them both heavily convicted. This would be an example of a double defection in
the game. Had the two men chosen to cooperated with each other the sentence
would have been a much more lenient one. Yet, as explained by the selfish gene
theory we instinctively think of our wellbeing alone and how we might get
betrayed. Not only is this the natural reaction because we might be saving
ourselves by blaming everything on the other guy, but because if we cooperate
and he defects, he will be saved and I the one who cooperated will get the
worst conviction.
We
played this game in class after reading the chapter. Although not as intense as
manipulating a conviction, we took to another level by putting our own grade at
risk. We would be given five rounds to play, if one cooperated and the other
defected the “traitor” got a .5 bump, if both cooperated each earned a .3 bump
and if both defected a .1 deduction would take place. When the preliminaries
begun, since our grade was not at risk we did not betray each other and played more
freely and my partner and I were loyal to each other. Nonetheless, when the
finals took place things changed completely. Logically, the best option would
have been to cooperate on all the five rounds so each would get a significant
increase, but our selfishness came into play. None of the finals round
proceeded without one defect. In fact, the first round were five straight
double defections, the following two had one player who betrayed the other on
the fourth or fifth round. Just like in the scenario we had no way of making an
agreement to ensure we wouldn’t naively be cheated through defection, so most
of us fell to temptation.
This
game impeccably portrays society and the way many partnerships end up breaking
up due to mistrust. Ideally, both parties could equally benefit from the agreement
and end up as winners. But we always want more, or in some cases to do less. If
we somehow may manage to do less work and earn equal recognition we will do it,
or less work and more rewards we will do it as well. Simple selfish gene
theory. This where being a sucker, grudger and a cheaters comes into play. A person
who would constantly choose to cooperate regardless of being cheated continuously,
will unequivocally be exploited and never benefit. Cheaters would lose their
partners’ trust as soon as they cheat them once, the grudger effect will finish
them off and neither will receive the benefits. Either option will result in
detrimentally for at least one party involved. Rationally, the best option
would be to cooperate as much as possible, but society simple does not work
that way and cheaters end up winning all the time. Even grudgers who know they
might get cheated again, may trust a cheater repeatedly to save an enterprise
or an important investment. This game accurately simulates conflictive decision
making and how temptation may overpower goodwill, even at a “friend’s” expense.
I do no agree with your "but society simply does not work that way and cheaters end up winning all the time." I believe that cheaters in the short-run will always win but sooner or later their acts catch up to them. The world calls for sleek movements, but if you mess with the wrong people every time, sooner or later you will have nothing. The world isn't happy because people tend to cheat, not because cheating works. People are limited therefore tend to cheat but if the world realizes that cooperating does pay off. Then the world would be truly successful.
ReplyDeleteEven though you clearly understand what Dawkins is trying to portray when presenting this game, I believe that human interaction is not fully represented here. If you were to speak about animals, because all of their emotions are purely selfish, it would work perfectly. Because humans have emotions attached to the decisions made, choosing to cooperate or defect can't be a completely good or bad decision.
ReplyDeleteThe way you compared the game and human behavior is clear and I agree with it. Humans are always in search of having the best “tittles”. As winners we feel better and we find ourselves searching for more and more, we are capable of breaking the trust just to win, even if there is no "price", the simply tittle of winners is enough, it satisfies us.
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