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May 31, 2004

Finite and Infinite Games: How to Live

Via Kevin Kellys Cool Tools.

The wisdom held in this brief book now informs most of what I do in life. Its key distinction--that there are two types of games, finite and infinite--resolves my uncertainties about what to do next. Easy: always choose infinite games. The message is appealing because it is deeply cybernetic, yet it's also genuinely mystical. I get an "aha" every time I return to it.

A finite game is played for the purpose of winning, an infinite game for the purpose of continuing the play.
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Finite players play within boundaries; infinite players play with boundaries.
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To be prepared against surprise is to be trained. To be prepared for surprise is to be educated.
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The death of an infinite player is dramatic. It does not mean that the game comes to an end with death; on the contrary, infinite players offer their death as a way of continuing the play. For that reason they do not play for their own life; they live for their own play.
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I can be powerful only by not playing, by showing that the game is over.
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Infinite players do not oppose the actions of others, but initiate actions of their own in such a way that others will play by initiating their own.
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Evil is the termination of infinite play.
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No one can play a game alone.
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There is but one infinite game.

Finite and Infinite Games
A Vision of Life as Play and Possibility
James P. Carse
1986, 180 pages
$7
Ballantine Books
Amazon

Posted by Bennu at May 31, 2004 06:16 PM | TrackBack
Comments

Infinite v. non-infinite games reminds me the stuff in The Reciprocality Project about Motivational Inversion, which discusses zero-sum and non-zero-sum games.

Seems like the fundamental law of playing infinite games is The Law of Reciprocality:

  1. If you want to help others, help yourself instead.
  2. If you want to help yourself, help others instead.
The focus on 'play' also reminds of some of the sayings of Organelle.

Posted by: Steve D at June 1, 2004 05:30 AM

That's a good principle, but I'm not quite sure how you got that to be the fundamental law of playing infinite games. Infinite games are about changing the rules in order to keep playing. Not in any pre-defined way, but in whatever way happens to be enjoyable.

Thanks for reminding me of Organelle. Great stuff, and I hadn't been there for a while.

Posted by: Flemming Funch at June 11, 2004 10:35 AM

I would like to know if the author has an official site, and if there are Spanish translations of his book somewhere.
Tks.

Posted by: Ibliss at September 27, 2004 01:52 PM