A noted expert presents clearly written discussions of essential ideas related to the highly useful mathematical approach to human behavior and decision-making. His lucid, accessible treatment examines such concepts as "utility," "strategy," and the difference between "non-zero" and "zero-sum" games. A minimum of mathematical prerequisites makes it accessible to non-mathematicians. 1970 edition.
This is a very dated book on game theory, but it does have the advantage of being easy to understand and provides some crucial algorithms for solving two-person games, both zero-sum, and mixed strategy games. It covers games against nature as well. It also has the advantage of being very short. I recommend this book over Game Theory: A Very Short Introduction as a basic short introductory text for non-mathematicians, like business majors and political science majors.
This whole book is amazing! This book helped me understand game theory so well, and I couldn't have completed my senior undergrad projects without this resource. It's so readable! And, he explains everything so clearly that anyone can access this level of book. Even those who don't study math can understand completely! 10/10 recommend
This book, although slim, is more of a textbook for an introductory course on game theory. It is by no means a brief read, but it has been simplified as much as possible for the layman to read. I successfully struggled through in the first chapters, tripped up around chapter 8, and continued to be tossed around more and more into oblivion until the end of chapter 11 (chapter 12 is just concluding thoughts on the whole matter). I resorted to Googling and watching Youtube videos for extra instruction and elaboration. At times it seems that this book gives more than you can chew to make sure that you at least get all the flavors before you decide to spit it out. Otherwise, this book was very well written for its purpose; I like a challenging book and this did not dissappoint. Those that are philosophically inclined will deeply appreciate this book; you will begin to see how zero-sum games, negotiations, saddle points, and insights from the prisoner's dilemma apply in real life; those that are not philosophically inclined will simply see an endless and pointless analysis of the interaction between two caricatures... those with no opinion can read chapter 12.
To be clear, I've only worked through Chs. 1-7 which give a good overview of 2 pp ZSG and (prudent) solution methods (an extension over the history of field--read previously). Good definitions and worked out examples. Much easier to go through discrete/numerical Castor-Pollux in pure prudent strat/minmax solution than extension to (variable version for) mixed strategy solution.