Finite and Infinite Games: Difference between revisions

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{{a|book review|{{br|Finite and Infinite Games: A Vision of Life as Play and Possibility}} by {{author|James P. Carse}}}}
{{a|book review|{{br|Finite and Infinite Games: A Vision of Life as Play and Possibility}} by {{author|James P. Carse}}}}
So much in this book — a rather obscure piece of cod philosophy from a religious studies professor in the mid nineteen-eighties that is having a fertile third aged, having been picked up by [[Life coach|life-coach]] to the [[LinkedIn]] generation, {{author|Simon Sinek}}, and spoken of reverently by {{author|Stewart Brand}} and those of the Long Now persuasion.
Carse, who died last year, is wilfully aphoristic in his literary style, and this is off-putting.<ref>Notably,  Carse’s talks about the infinite game concept are much ''less''  cryptic and are worth checking out.</ref> He often says things like:
{{quote|Of infinite players we can also say that if they play they play freely; if they ''must'' play, they cannot ''play''.}}
Now this is important, but the book would be better — and more scrutable — had Carse taken more time to explain exactly this is meant to mean. That may be why Mr. Sinek has been able to make such hay: that is in a sense the job he has done.<ref>{{br|The Infinite Game}} by {{author|Simon Sinek}} (2019) ([https://g.co/kgs/J4Mg35 see here]).</ref> But, irony: the job of imaginatively deducing what Mr. Carse meant with his gnomic interventions is a kind of infinite game of its own — one that Mr. Sinek is playing pretty well. So let us join in.




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*[[Paradigm failure]]
*[[Paradigm failure]]

Revision as of 10:56, 11 March 2022

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Finite and Infinite Games: A Vision of Life as Play and Possibility by James P. Carse

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So much in this book — a rather obscure piece of cod philosophy from a religious studies professor in the mid nineteen-eighties that is having a fertile third aged, having been picked up by life-coach to the LinkedIn generation, Simon Sinek, and spoken of reverently by Stewart Brand and those of the Long Now persuasion.

Carse, who died last year, is wilfully aphoristic in his literary style, and this is off-putting.[1] He often says things like:

Of infinite players we can also say that if they play they play freely; if they must play, they cannot play.

Now this is important, but the book would be better — and more scrutable — had Carse taken more time to explain exactly this is meant to mean. That may be why Mr. Sinek has been able to make such hay: that is in a sense the job he has done.[2] But, irony: the job of imaginatively deducing what Mr. Carse meant with his gnomic interventions is a kind of infinite game of its own — one that Mr. Sinek is playing pretty well. So let us join in.



See also

  1. Notably, Carse’s talks about the infinite game concept are much less cryptic and are worth checking out.
  2. The Infinite Game by Simon Sinek (2019) (see here).