http://blog.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/9041/title/Math_Trek__Mathematical_Fortune-Telling
"Predicting the future is not very hard, according to Bruce Bueno de Mesquita: a little mathematics is all you need. Figuring out how to manipulate a situation to achieve specific aims is a bit less straightforward, but Bueno de Mesquita says his mathematical tools can usually do that, too."
Fascinating stuff. Apparently, Bueno de Mesquita's computer models are based on game theory and rational choice theory. Personally, I'm not convinced that humans are very rational, but irrational beliefs could well act as valid inputs to the equation. It reminds me of Hari Seldon's science of Psychohistory from Isaac Asimov's Foundation trilogy -- except that Psychohistory as Asimov envisaged it seemed to have more in common with Statistical Thermodynamics. Psychohistory relied on a vast Galactic population creating historical forces that mere individuals could not deflect -- akin to a Marxist or materialist view of history . Bueno de Mesquita's model seems to totally ignore the little people and concentrate on interactions between the main players, which is more consistent with a Hegelian view of history.
It seems as though there is money to be made from this computer model, as it has not been made available for peer review, and Bueno de Mesquita has set up a company (Mesquita & Roundell) to exploit it.
It'll be interesting to see if some of the "players" (volatile regimes in certain countries) cotton onto the fact that their stances and motivations can be modelled and predicted, and how they react to this if they feel they are being manipulated.
"Predicting the future is not very hard, according to Bruce Bueno de Mesquita: a little mathematics is all you need. Figuring out how to manipulate a situation to achieve specific aims is a bit less straightforward, but Bueno de Mesquita says his mathematical tools can usually do that, too."
Fascinating stuff. Apparently, Bueno de Mesquita's computer models are based on game theory and rational choice theory. Personally, I'm not convinced that humans are very rational, but irrational beliefs could well act as valid inputs to the equation. It reminds me of Hari Seldon's science of Psychohistory from Isaac Asimov's Foundation trilogy -- except that Psychohistory as Asimov envisaged it seemed to have more in common with Statistical Thermodynamics. Psychohistory relied on a vast Galactic population creating historical forces that mere individuals could not deflect -- akin to a Marxist or materialist view of history . Bueno de Mesquita's model seems to totally ignore the little people and concentrate on interactions between the main players, which is more consistent with a Hegelian view of history.
It seems as though there is money to be made from this computer model, as it has not been made available for peer review, and Bueno de Mesquita has set up a company (Mesquita & Roundell) to exploit it.
It'll be interesting to see if some of the "players" (volatile regimes in certain countries) cotton onto the fact that their stances and motivations can be modelled and predicted, and how they react to this if they feel they are being manipulated.