AthenaAwakened
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Erick said:With regards to the video, I found the reported reactions to the rigged Monopoly game very unusual.
Something I have noticed--when one substantially improves one's financial lot there tends to be a lot of envy from those left behind. If one doesn't share as much as *THEY* want the person whose lot improved tends to be seen as mean.
Not only is the game rigged, it is massively rigged in favour of one player. And not only is it massively rigged, it is rigged in such a way that both people know this. So attributing a victory to any skill is just ridiculous.Why?
Not only is the game rigged, it is massively rigged in favour of one player. And not only is it massively rigged, it is rigged in such a way that both people know this. So attributing a victory to any skill is just ridiculous.Why?
I have played in handicapped chess tournaments before. eg the best players get 3 minutes to make all their moves, while worse players get more time (with, say, the worst players in the field getting 10 minutes). Now here, of course, the idea is to even up the playing field rather than to make it totally lopsided; and here skill still plays a massive part in the result, rather than having been totally eliminated. But if, say, one of the weaker players defeated one of the stronger players they would accept that it was largely due to the handicapping system.
So if people in this experiment attributed their victory to skill, I find that to be really unusual behaviour.
Not only is the game rigged, it is massively rigged in favour of one player. And not only is it massively rigged, it is rigged in such a way that both people know this. So attributing a victory to any skill is just ridiculous.Why?
I have played in handicapped chess tournaments before. eg the best players get 3 minutes to make all their moves, while worse players get more time (with, say, the worst players in the field getting 10 minutes). Now here, of course, the idea is to even up the playing field rather than to make it totally lopsided; and here skill still plays a massive part in the result, rather than having been totally eliminated. But if, say, one of the weaker players defeated one of the stronger players they would accept that it was largely due to the handicapping system.
So if people in this experiment attributed their victory to skill, I find that to be really unusual behaviour.
have you studied the wealthy? Academically studied the wealthy or the effects of wealth on people?
Why?
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Something I have noticed--when one substantially improves one's financial lot there tends to be a lot of envy from those left behind. If one doesn't share as much as *THEY* want the person whose lot improved tends to be seen as mean.
what did you notice about the people who got the money? that's who the OP is about.
Not only is the game rigged, it is massively rigged in favour of one player. And not only is it massively rigged, it is rigged in such a way that both people know this. So attributing a victory to any skill is just ridiculous.Why?
I have played in handicapped chess tournaments before. eg the best players get 3 minutes to make all their moves, while worse players get more time (with, say, the worst players in the field getting 10 minutes). Now here, of course, the idea is to even up the playing field rather than to make it totally lopsided; and here skill still plays a massive part in the result, rather than having been totally eliminated. But if, say, one of the weaker players defeated one of the stronger players they would accept that it was largely due to the handicapping system.
So if people in this experiment attributed their victory to skill, I find that to be really unusual behaviour.
Why?
- - - Updated - - -
Something I have noticed--when one substantially improves one's financial lot there tends to be a lot of envy from those left behind. If one doesn't share as much as *THEY* want the person whose lot improved tends to be seen as mean.
what did you notice about the people who got the money? that's who the OP is about.
The point is that others may perceive the person as being mean when they aren't.
Not only is the game rigged, it is massively rigged in favour of one player. And not only is it massively rigged, it is rigged in such a way that both people know this. So attributing a victory to any skill is just ridiculous.Why?
I have played in handicapped chess tournaments before. eg the best players get 3 minutes to make all their moves, while worse players get more time (with, say, the worst players in the field getting 10 minutes). Now here, of course, the idea is to even up the playing field rather than to make it totally lopsided; and here skill still plays a massive part in the result, rather than having been totally eliminated. But if, say, one of the weaker players defeated one of the stronger players they would accept that it was largely due to the handicapping system.
So if people in this experiment attributed their victory to skill, I find that to be really unusual behaviour.
have you studied the wealthy? Academically studied the wealthy or the effects of wealth on people?
No. But these people aren't wealthy. They are just playing a game - and I have played lots of games. Or are you trying to imply that because Monopoly is played with something which resembles money, people treat it differently to, for example, a rigged Scrabble game where each of their words scored 10 times what it ought?
But that was a contrived position they had never been in before. The Monopoly game was a slight variation on a situation they presumably had experienced before. It is no more contrived than my Scrabble example. If you ran an experiment where you repeatedly sat pairs of people down to play Scrabble with one player scoring 10 times what their word was worth, and asked them at the end why they had won, do you think they would say something like "I couldn't help but win", or would you expect them to say things like "Well I cleverly played 'cat' on a double word score and got 100 points, whereas the best he could do was 'zeugma' for a mere 78". because it seems like the contestants in the Monopoly game were saying things like the latter, and that is surprising to me.Not only is the game rigged, it is massively rigged in favour of one player. And not only is it massively rigged, it is rigged in such a way that both people know this. So attributing a victory to any skill is just ridiculous.Why?
I have played in handicapped chess tournaments before. eg the best players get 3 minutes to make all their moves, while worse players get more time (with, say, the worst players in the field getting 10 minutes). Now here, of course, the idea is to even up the playing field rather than to make it totally lopsided; and here skill still plays a massive part in the result, rather than having been totally eliminated. But if, say, one of the weaker players defeated one of the stronger players they would accept that it was largely due to the handicapping system.
So if people in this experiment attributed their victory to skill, I find that to be really unusual behaviour.
have you studied the wealthy? Academically studied the wealthy or the effects of wealth on people?
No. But these people aren't wealthy. They are just playing a game - and I have played lots of games. Or are you trying to imply that because Monopoly is played with something which resembles money, people treat it differently to, for example, a rigged Scrabble game where each of their words scored 10 times what it ought?
and in the Stanford study about guards and prisoners, the "guards and prisoners" weren't in the corrections system, they were college students who underwent drastic personality change because they were put into a contrived situation and evoked from them sides of their personality that were not good.
It isn't; but if you play them seriously enough, you will tend to study those things too.and having played games is not the same as having studied game structure or game players' behavior.
I find them less surprising, which is why I singled out the Monopoly example.Also, the monopoly study is not the only study mentioned in the talk. Do you have an opinion on those?
But that was a contrived position they had never been in before. The Monopoly game was a slight variation on a situation they presumably had experienced before. It is no more contrived than my Scrabble example. If you ran an experiment where you repeatedly sat pairs of people down to play Scrabble with one player scoring 10 times what their word was worth, and asked them at the end why they had won, do you think they would say something like "I couldn't help but win", or would you expect them to say things like "Well I cleverly played 'cat' on a double word score and got 100 points, whereas the best he could do was 'zeugma' for a mere 78". because it seems like the contestants in the Monopoly game were saying things like the latter, and that is surprising to me.Not only is the game rigged, it is massively rigged in favour of one player. And not only is it massively rigged, it is rigged in such a way that both people know this. So attributing a victory to any skill is just ridiculous.Why?
I have played in handicapped chess tournaments before. eg the best players get 3 minutes to make all their moves, while worse players get more time (with, say, the worst players in the field getting 10 minutes). Now here, of course, the idea is to even up the playing field rather than to make it totally lopsided; and here skill still plays a massive part in the result, rather than having been totally eliminated. But if, say, one of the weaker players defeated one of the stronger players they would accept that it was largely due to the handicapping system.
So if people in this experiment attributed their victory to skill, I find that to be really unusual behaviour.
have you studied the wealthy? Academically studied the wealthy or the effects of wealth on people?
No. But these people aren't wealthy. They are just playing a game - and I have played lots of games. Or are you trying to imply that because Monopoly is played with something which resembles money, people treat it differently to, for example, a rigged Scrabble game where each of their words scored 10 times what it ought?
and in the Stanford study about guards and prisoners, the "guards and prisoners" weren't in the corrections system, they were college students who underwent drastic personality change because they were put into a contrived situation and evoked from them sides of their personality that were not good.
It isn't; but if you play them seriously enough, you will tend to study those things too.and having played games is not the same as having studied game structure or game players' behavior.
I find them less surprising, which is why I singled out the Monopoly example.Also, the monopoly study is not the only study mentioned in the talk. Do you have an opinion on those?
What is surprising is they are taking on the role of skillful Monopoly player. Would you be equally unsurprised if, in my hypothetical Scrabble experiment, the winners starting talking about the good moves they made which lead them to win?But that was a contrived position they had never been in before. The Monopoly game was a slight variation on a situation they presumably had experienced before. It is no more contrived than my Scrabble example. If you ran an experiment where you repeatedly sat pairs of people down to play Scrabble with one player scoring 10 times what their word was worth, and asked them at the end why they had won, do you think they would say something like "I couldn't help but win", or would you expect them to say things like "Well I cleverly played 'cat' on a double word score and got 100 points, whereas the best he could do was 'zeugma' for a mere 78". because it seems like the contestants in the Monopoly game were saying things like the latter, and that is surprising to me.Not only is the game rigged, it is massively rigged in favour of one player. And not only is it massively rigged, it is rigged in such a way that both people know this. So attributing a victory to any skill is just ridiculous.Why?
I have played in handicapped chess tournaments before. eg the best players get 3 minutes to make all their moves, while worse players get more time (with, say, the worst players in the field getting 10 minutes). Now here, of course, the idea is to even up the playing field rather than to make it totally lopsided; and here skill still plays a massive part in the result, rather than having been totally eliminated. But if, say, one of the weaker players defeated one of the stronger players they would accept that it was largely due to the handicapping system.
So if people in this experiment attributed their victory to skill, I find that to be really unusual behaviour.
have you studied the wealthy? Academically studied the wealthy or the effects of wealth on people?
No. But these people aren't wealthy. They are just playing a game - and I have played lots of games. Or are you trying to imply that because Monopoly is played with something which resembles money, people treat it differently to, for example, a rigged Scrabble game where each of their words scored 10 times what it ought?
and in the Stanford study about guards and prisoners, the "guards and prisoners" weren't in the corrections system, they were college students who underwent drastic personality change because they were put into a contrived situation and evoked from them sides of their personality that were not good.
It isn't; but if you play them seriously enough, you will tend to study those things too.and having played games is not the same as having studied game structure or game players' behavior.
I find them less surprising, which is why I singled out the Monopoly example.Also, the monopoly study is not the only study mentioned in the talk. Do you have an opinion on those?
if the other examples don't surprise you, why would the monopoly game surprise you? The players are taking the role of wealthy person, A Member of a class with stronger feelings of entitlement and lower feelings empathy.
But your point isn't an answer to the question. I am asking you what you observed about the people who can into money. This is not difficult and it is actually on point.