Perry E. Metzger wrote:
There are surely alternatives to the extremes of unilateral disarmament and an arms race? For instance, slowing down the race?
Don't ask the question as though it is theoretical. Don't try answering it as though your personal values have any bearing, because there is indeed an objective answer here. Try doing some game theory simulations and see how well unilateral disarmament works.
Perry, just out of curiosity which type of game theory system are you refering to, the standard, single shot game thoery or the communicative model of Alker, Hurwitz and Rothkin? As a computer scientist I would have thought you would have been up on the idea of adding memory to game theory interactions. In such cases the optimal outcome can turn out very differently than in the standard model. Claiming certainty from theoretical results is in general not a good idea. Unless you can explain the relevance of the theory to a situation and explain why the assumptions in the model are justified you are not saying very much. The fact that the US and the USSR did manage to negotiate disarmament despite the standard game theory predictions shows that the system is somewhat more complex than Perry's ideological view. Briefly stated in Alker-Hurwitz a "memory" component was added into the model. The prisoner's dilema was repeated on many occasisons in a variety of contexts, including computer simulation and in practice. In practice the prisoner's chose the joint optimal solution the majority of the time.
Oh, and don't give us stuff about how humans are above evolutionary pressures or nonsense like that, because we aren't any more above such pressures than we are above the laws of physics.
The "laws" of social scienst are not the "laws of physics". The "laws of physics" aren't so constant either. Theoretical results should inform the intellect not serve as a substitute for it. If you apply genetic programming techniques to the system the strategy that evolves is typically a cooperative one. The facts is that the theory applied in an evolutionary context disproves Perry. Phill