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How to outsmart the Prisoner’s Dilemma - Lucas Husted
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4,575,631 Views • Aug 27, 2020 • Click to toggle off description
Puzzle through the classic game theory challenge, The Prisoner’s Dilemma, and decide: would you choose to spare or sacrifice?

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Two perfectly rational gingerbread men, Crispy and Chewy, are out strolling when they’re caught by a fox. Instead of simply eating them, he decides to put their friendship to the test with a cruel dilemma. He’ll ask each gingerbread man whether he’d opt to Spare or Sacrifice the other. What should they choose? Lucas Husted dives into the classic game theory scenario: the Prisoner's Dilemma.

Lesson by Lucas Husted, directed by Ivana Bošnjack and Thomas Johnson.

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Views : 4,575,631
Genre: Education
Date of upload: Aug 27, 2020 ^^


Rating : 4.92 (3,162/154,773 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-04-09T13:16:51.628156Z
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YouTube Comments - 4,564 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@sophiesmith9300

3 years ago

"Two perfectly rational gingerbread men" As gingerbread men usually are

18K |

@mrsahilbawa

3 years ago

Why isn’t that wizard minding his own business? Typical wizard.

10K |

@vernowietsch

2 years ago

"Infinite triple limb consumption" is not a phrase I had expected to ever hear in my life, but I am not disappointed

8.6K |

@chronicirritation

2 years ago

if the gingerbread men were actually smart they would have just offered to let the fox eat their gingerbread house

2.1K |

@maliksiraj3443

3 years ago

Plot Twist : The Fox Was Disguised As The Wizard, To Eat them Everyday!

3.2K |

@natalicox9939

3 years ago

Moral of the story: Don’t look happy when you encounter a fox.

4.1K |

@PhantomSavage

2 years ago

At that point I'd just say "well, if he's going to eat one or part of us anyway. New plan: Kill the fox or die trying." I'd say YOLO, but it wouldn't apply here.

3.2K |

@Prestonhlt

2 years ago

"Their eternity may be very crumby but so long as they go out on a limb their lives will never be half baked." well done guys. Got three puns in at the final few seconds of the video. Bravo

419 |

@theofficefan6192

3 years ago

“The weather today is partly suspicious, with chances of betrayal.” wow who hurt you

9.2K |

@adumba3709

3 years ago

Of course the gingerbread people are perfectly rational, everyone in the Ted Ed universe is

11K |

@Ben-rz9cf

2 years ago

I like stuff like this because its a convincing argument you can make to even a sociopath that morality is a logical thing.

738 |

@sbrevoltuion5

2 years ago

The flaw in the rationality is that while crispy looses nothing of his own, he does lose something very valuable: a friend

168 |

@Jingatoe

3 years ago

alternate ending: the fox dies because he ate too much sugar.

7.9K |

@e32b61

3 years ago

“Seeing how happy they are, he decides that instead of simply eating them...” Aww. How kind of him — “... he will subject them to a game of mental anguish as well as physical torture.” What the — ?

4.7K |

@silencia08

2 years ago

Fox: So have you decided? Fox: Who will be sacrificed and who will be spared? Chewy & Crispy: (in unison) Yes we have decided to sacrifice the WIZARD!!!

948 |

@joshuadonnelly1978

2 years ago

Oh, so THAT'S how you outsmart the Prisoners' Dilemma... by just changing the premise so it's literally not the Prisoners' Dilemma anymore.

780 |

@prettyoriginalnameprettyor7506

3 years ago

When you realise that the wizard is just trying to feed his pet fox. Being a freelance wizard is a low income job after all.

1.8K |

@char8962

3 years ago

the cookies: 😀😀 the fox: yall a lil too happy so imma test y’all the cookies: 😐😐

3.6K |

@Phoenix-King-ozai

2 years ago

“ Fox, we have come to bargain ...” “ You have come to have your limbs eaten “

7 |

@brandonlopina7733

2 years ago

This video is a great way to show explain all of these concepts. My only qualm is that I don't think Chewy and Crispy friendship is represented by the problem which is fine for the video but it would of been fun to talk about. If my friend was going to lose 3 or all of his limbs I would probably value those at least a little bit. The simple graph assumes that Chewy and Crispy are opposing players in a game and not working against the fox on a team with limited communication. I would have to assume that two real friends would draw the graph out based on the total number of limbs between the two of them rather than the number of limbs individually and therefore always pick Spare from the get go.

81 |

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