Finite and infinite games

A Vision of Life as Play and Possibility

Paperback, 180 pages

English language

Published 1987 by Ballantine Books.

ISBN:
978-0-345-34184-6
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3 stars (1 review)

Finite games are the familiar contests of everyday life, the games we play in business and politics, in the bedroom and on the battlefield — games with winners and losers, a beginning and an end. Infinite games are the more mysterious — and ultimately more rewarding. They are unscripted and unpredictable; they are the source of true freedom.

-- from the back cover of the 1986 edition.

7 editions

Review of 'Finite and infinite games' on 'Storygraph'

3 stars

It's not a bad book. Or even a wrong book. It just doesn't work.

The book talks about finite and infinite games and ascribes qualities to them, then tries to map life into games of various types. These are not games in the old economic Nash sense of the word -- they're about play, seriousness, roles, and rules.

It doesn't work. I don't buy it. I will accept that you can define various activities as games, but the sheer variety and scale of it all defeats the purpose -- if everything in life is a game, up to and including the Holocaust, then it trivializes life itself.

Time after time I would read a couple of sentences and double take. He couldn't have meant that. He couldn't have said that. And while from a certain perspective I could see that it was meant to be insightful, it looked to me …

Subjects

  • Life
  • Games -- Symbolic aspects
  • Religion
  • Philosophy