Tragedy of the Commons

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/qNBgJzBhuczzsn5tX/tragedy-of-the-commons

Contents

Canon Form


General Form


Scenario 1

The players cannot communicate at all with each other.

Scenario 2

The players can communicate freely with each other, and even exclusively with selected players during the course of the game, except from when at least one of the prospective conversation partners is making their deposit(s). I think Scenario 2 is more practical, but I’m interested in the results of Scenario 1 analysis.
I think the problem is interesting because:

Nota Bene

In the original game, a conference took place at the beginning of each round. During this conference, if more than half of the players agreed, they could exile one player. At most one player could be exiled per round. I left this out, as I’m not sure how we could usefully analyse this factor of expulsion. Furthermore, the players in canon were not randomly selected, and there were in fact two groups of players that knew each other very well (plus one wild card who was familiar with both groups, but unpredictability was sort of her thing).

Post Script

I loved the manga (totally recommend it), and it made me rethink how I define rational (the post on that is coming out this weekend). I introduced "competent" to my vocabulary to refer to people who actually make utility maximising decisions (i.e win). "competent" is different from "rational", because competency can only be evaluated after the decision has been made, and not before. I decided that however I define rationality, it should be evaluatable apriori, or it wouldn’t be a very useful definition.
Competency is introduced, so as to compare rationality with competency. The competent decision is the action that maximises payoff under the state of the world that ended up occurring. I don’t want to be rational—I want to be competent—I care about maximising expected utility, only in so much as it helps me maximise utility. I care only about being more rational in so much as it makes me more competent. I think this should be true for others as well—and this is the only moral prescription I make:

Maximise your utility. ---

Standardised Jargon

Some relationships

Accumulated knowledge so far