The ‘prisoner’s dilemma’ is a classic example of game theory and a tool for decision-making, where two rational, independent players must choose between cooperation and conflict to arrive at what’s perceived as the best outcome. Central to the interactive nature of the game is that the payoff (optimal or otherwise) for any single player deliberating his or her decisions and the consequences of those decisions hinges on the strategies that the other player chooses to implement according to assumptions and rules.
The prisoner’s dilemma was the product of modeling work performed in 1950; however, it was the mathematician Albert Tucker who ultimately structured and named the thought experiment as we know it today. The standard description of the prisoner’s dilemma runs along these lines:
Two prisoners are being interrogated apart from one another for crimes they are believed to have committed jointly. Although officials have enough evidence to convict both suspects on the lesser of the two charges, they have insufficient evidence for a conviction on the more severe crime they’re suspected of. The prosecutor, therefore, simultaneously but separately offers each prisoner a plea deal. The deal offered is either to provide information adequate to convict the other suspect in an act of betrayal, or to remain silent and refuse to testify, this being in effect a form of continued cooperation with their fellow prisoner.
• If both prisoners refuse to talk about their involvement in the main crime — that is, they cooperate with each other — they will both serve only one year (for the lesser crime).
• If one prisoner refuses to talk, but his partner chooses to betray (implicate) the other regarding the main crime, the silent prisoner will be sentenced to three years while the testifying prisoner will be set free.
• If, instead, both suspects implicate each other, both will fetch a sentence of two years.The thought experiment is supposed to illustrate that neither prisoner has faith that his accomplice will stay tight-lipped, so both prisoners cannot resist testifying, with the tantalising hope of going free. These supposedly rational prisoners therefore pursue their self-interest, implicating each other. But the result is that both prisoners end up serving two years instead of one year if both had remained mum.
The lessons of the prisoner’s dilemma have been applied to many real-life, non-zero-sum situations. In such situations, cooperation results in better outcomes for all parties than if each party single-mindedly chases his or her own interests (rather than mutual interest) in order misguidedly to gain advantage over the other. So, for example, individually self-interested decisions can lead to injurious consequences for all. There are many everyday instances of the dilemma playing out, cutting across diverse behavioural arenas, such as economics, politics, biology, psychology, sports, academia, business, commerce, the workplace, and more. I'll briefly describe one particular instance.
In international strategic positioning, one theory assumes that all states ultimately compete rather than cooperate, their decisions reflecting rational self-interest to acquire advantage. For example, during the seventy-year Cold War, the phalanxes of NATO and the Warsaw Pact faced three options:
• Both sides endlessly scramble to deploy ever-more-advanced nuclear and conventional weapons to protect themselves and menace others, this being a policy with enormous, hard-to-sustain economic cost;
• One side greatly expands and enhances its forces while the other side doesn’t, the latter fearing betrayal and placing itself in peril while, on the upside, conserving its economic resources;It seems that the last of these choices, cooperation, would have led to the most desirable shared outcome; however, the delusion of ‘rational self-interest’ — doggedly pursuing individual reward — led both alliances to arm to the teeth, escalating the chance of conflict while hugely taxing both economies. Eventual arms-control agreements, though shaky and often tested, attempted to showcase cooperation, albeit fed by acute wariness: to keep a first-strike advantage out of the opposition’s hands.
• Or both sides agree to disarm, thus reducing the probability of war while both avoid the massive expense of highly robust militaries.
The fragility of such agreements has been evident recently, in the fraught pursuit of arms control between the West and North Korea (with an already-existing nuclear arsenal) and the West and Iran (with an incipient capability, along with a presumably quick breakout to deployed nuclear weapons). In prisoner’s dilemma fashion, the resultant policies have reflected rational self-interest more so than cooperation, goaded by various motivators:
• Distrust over intent and betrayal, such as ‘regime change’;
• Anxiety over cheating and existential threats;
• Incendiary rhetoric threatening obliteration;
• The honest-to-goodness objectives that skulk below the public pronouncements;
• Risk of later repudiation of agreements;
• Bristling at the opposition’s negotiation tactics, where cultural differences intrude.
Thus far, outcomes, such as they are, have mirrored these dynamics of distrust and antagonism, stemming from what is sometimes referred to as the Hobbesian trap, where parties default to tit-for-tat parrying over non-cooperative prisoner’s dilemma strategies.
Few circumstances, however, quite rise to the level of conforming to the idealism captured by John Rawls’s assertion that:
Yet, the prisoner’s dilemma thought experiment does bear upon many real-life situations that decision-makers around the world tackle daily. Scenarios that reflect how the push–pull between cooperation and conflict, as well as outcomes and payoffs, become complex — the more so with multiple parties in play, as in the example of strategic defence just described.Few circumstances, however, quite rise to the level of conforming to the idealism captured by John Rawls’s assertion that:
‘The hazards of the generalized prisoner’s dilemma are removed by the match between the right and the good.’
Another case involves the environment and global measures to mitigate serious threats emanating from climate change, as well as from the dilated timeline for halting or slowing the trajectory of that change. The key goal being to yield benefits shared across national borders. The self-serving interests so often associated with prisoner’s dilemma thinking — and the assumption that other countries will shoulder the burden of changing policies that harm the environment — might result in even developed nations keeping performance targets easy.
The purpose would be to protect themselves from social and economic disruption, as well as not to be taken advantage of in, say, lowering pollutants. Meanwhile, yet other countries may silently breach the Paris climate accord and the agreements reached recently in Katowice, Poland — neither of which arguably provides adequate confidence in the ‘fair play’ of others, provides sufficient metrics and accountability, proves demonstrably enforceable, or meaningfully disincentivises cheating.
Despite, therefore, the apparent win–win payoff that can stem from cooperation, from focus on mutual interests, and from trust-building, the strategic application of the prisoner’s dilemma in seeking maximum payoffs may still lead to parties succumbing to the myopic illusion of advantaged self-interest, and the delusion of being able to avoid incurring costs as a consequence.
Despite, therefore, the apparent win–win payoff that can stem from cooperation, from focus on mutual interests, and from trust-building, the strategic application of the prisoner’s dilemma in seeking maximum payoffs may still lead to parties succumbing to the myopic illusion of advantaged self-interest, and the delusion of being able to avoid incurring costs as a consequence.
Well stated Keith. Self interest when combined with a lack of trust will always lead to situations where self interests dominate cooperative efforts.
ReplyDeleteI would think that you are on 'home ground' here. Intuitively, the dilemma tells me that a closed universe, a logical world, provides no basis for correct decision-making.
ReplyDeleteThe hunt for judgements obscures ones mind?
ReplyDeleteThank you, ‘Anonymous’, Thomas, and Tessa, for all your illuminating comments.
ReplyDeleteAnonymous: Many real-world events do seem to affirm, time and again, the incisive observations you make here. The ‘self-interest’ and ‘lack of trust’ you cite as integral to the prisoner’s dilemma are hard urges for decision-makers to cancel out and move beyond, even when the nobler quest for ‘cooperation’ entices, if only momentarily.
Thomas: I would agree, though just insofar as logic isn’t the be-all of ‘correct decision-making’. That said, I’d contend this point doesn’t diminish logic; in that manner, I regard logic as an indispensable (even if insufficient) basis of knowledge and understanding — and thus, by extension, of correct decision-making.
Beyond the boundaries of logic, one starts to venture knee-deep into the curious morass of human biases, preconceived expectations, shifting emotions, cherished fallacies, insinuated motivations, benign and malign influences — and much else that subjectively resides viscerally in one’s gut. These influences sometimes nourish creative decision-making; other times they encumber.
I’m intrigued by mention of a ‘closed universe’, particularly in the context of the prisoner’s dilemma and players gaming out decisions. Admittedly, my personal frame of reference for the expression ‘closed universe’ rests in the physics of cosmology, with its contrasts to an ‘open universe’. I confess that may be unhelpful and probably isn’t the intent here.
Tessa: I would add, in trying to build on your query, that there is indeed a subterfuge often interwoven into gaming out alternative options, prospective payoffs, and players’ ultimate decisions associated with prisoner’s dilemma scenarios. That process can and not uncommonly does ‘obscure’ intent and more broadly the mind, along with the sometimes-muddied rationale for choices. Including whether to go for ultimate self-gain (and its consequences) or cooperation (and its consequences).
Isn't the point of the dilemma that 'logic' leads both participants to a sub-optimal outcome?
ReplyDeleteThere have been some scary real cases in history, I think a flock of birds triggered the post-war nuclear alarm in Moscow, for example, but the military officer whose 'finger was on the button' used INTUITION not logic to decide against 'presing the button' and ordering Russian missiles to be launched. These days, they might well be because response times have shrunk and automated systems have cut out the human element. But the human judgement set aside the 'logic' of the situation to rely instead on something more like background commonsense... and trust.
ReplyDeleteJust as I make the point above, Martin, that logic is ‘necessary’ and ‘insufficient’, I would propose that intuition is likewise necessary and insufficient. Neither can be dependably set aside. Aren’t logic and intuition, after all, two legitimate sides of decision-making: both offering advantages/strengths and disadvantages/weaknesses, and both (at the exclusion of the other) possibly leading to good or bad outcomes? As such, I would hesitate to demonize logic — which has gotten the world to good outcomes — and I would hesitate to demonize intuition — which has also gotten the world to good outcomes. I suspect history — including Cold War history — is replete with examples where unqualified resort to logic and unqualified resort to intuition led to decision-makers ultimately saying, ‘Ouch, that was a bad idea’.
ReplyDeleteThe trick, I think, is getting the mix of logic and intuition just right — the Goldilocks factor — for the particular circumstances at hand. (Hence the tense dance between logic and intuition currently going on between the United States and North Korea, which we hope they’ll get right.) The prisoners in the ‘prisoner’s dilemma’, in earnestly, deviously, misguidedly trying to gain self-serving advantage, get the mix wrong — neither logic’s sole fault, nor intuition’s sole fault, I suggest. Therefore, the idea that logic ‘provides no basis for decision-making’ is, in my opinion, a step too far. As I concluded in the essay, the devil resides more in the ‘illusion of advantaged self-interest, and the delusion of being able to avoid incurring costs’. Heads of governments, parrying with each other in real life over existential matters, often demonstrate how logic and intuition are both — in their own ways, I suggest — necessary yet insufficient.
"the devil resides more in the ‘illusion of advantaged self-interest' "
ReplyDeleteSure and it makes a good quote!