Reith Lectures 2002
 Home
 What is Trust
 On Trust & Philosophy
 Trust and Society
 Hall of Fame

Tzu

Plato

Aristotle
Machiavelli
Hobbes
Hume
Rousseau
Kant
Marx
Foucault
Nash
Baier
O'Neill
 Prisoner's Dilemma
 Onora O'Neill on Trust
 Feedback
 OU Courses
 Site Map
 Downloads

 

go to The Philosophy of Trust homepage
go to Open2.net homepage go to OU homepage go to BBC homepage
 
 

 


John Nash was educated at both Bachelor and Masters level in mathematics at Carnegie Institute of Technology. He went on to Princeton University to work towards his doctorate, which he completed in 1950 with the publication of his ‘Non-cooperative Games’ thesis in which he laid down the mathematical foundations of games theory (brought to popular culture in the film ‘A Beautiful Mind’).

In mathematics, games theory looks at situations where two (or more) participants have a range of possible choices that they can take. Each decides which choice to make in the light of others' choices, since the outcome is produced by the particular combination of their choices. The 'Nash Equilibrium' is the outcome which would be produced by each making the best choice, given their knowledge of others' choices.

One of the classic examples of games theory is the ‘Prisoner’s Dilemma’. You can try out the Open University's interactive version of the dilema by clicking here.

 
go to Radio 4 homepage

Printable Versions


download PDF version of this document
halloffame.pdf
(88Kb)

download Word version of this document
halloffame.doc
(55Kb)


Right-click the
links and select
"save target as..."
to download
the files.

Go to the downloads
page to get the
viewers.