Are evolutionary games another way of thinking about game theory ? Some historical considerations
Schmidt, Christian (2004), Are evolutionary games another way of thinking about game theory ? Some historical considerations, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 14, 2, p. 249-262
Type
Article accepté pour publication ou publiéDate
2004Journal name
Journal of Evolutionary EconomicsVolume
14Number
2Pages
249-262
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor(s)
Schmidt, ChristianAbstract (EN)
Evolutionary games really appeared in the field of economics at the beginning of the nineties. More than sixty years previously, V. Volterra published several papers on population dynamics which captured species evolution in a game-theoretical fashion. The second round of the history starts with J.F. Nash., who probably ignored E. Borel's works on games and took up his challenge. Nash's approach seems to reconcile Borel's and Volterra's approaches to a game situation. A Nash equilibrium is defined as a rational situation, by reference to a stable situation. In a Nash equilibrium, no player has an incentive to deviate.Subjects / Keywords
Jeux, Théorie des; Histoire économique; Économie évolutionnisteRelated items
Showing items related by title and author.
-
Schmidt, Christian (2000) Chapitre d'ouvrage
-
Schmidt, Christian (2001) Chapitre d'ouvrage
-
Schmidt, Christian (2010) Communication / Conférence
-
Buckdahn, Rainer; Cardaliaguet, Pierre; Quincampoix, Marc (2011) Article accepté pour publication ou publié
-
Robert, Christian P.; Rousseau, Judith (2016) Document de travail / Working paper