

Game theory usually arrives wrapped in equations, diagrams, and technical language. This book strips all that away and gets to the heart of the subject: how people actually interact when their choices affect one another. From trust and conflict to cooperation and power, it demonstrates that game theory is not about cold calculation. Still, about understanding human behaviour in the social settings we encounter every day. Moving from classic ideas like the Prisoner’s Dilemma and Nash equilibrium to real-world applications in politics, economics, law, workplaces, families, and online life, the book explains strategic thinking without turning it into a math exercise. It draws on history, psychology, and lived experience to show why people often act “irrationally,” why fairness and emotions matter, and how rules and institutions shape outcomes more than individual cleverness. Written for thoughtful readers rather than specialists, this book invites you to see the world through a strategic lens while keeping a sense of humility. It does not promise winning strategies or manipulation tricks. Instead, it offers clarity: a way to understand why cooperation succeeds or fails, why bad systems produce bad outcomes, and how better games can lead to better lives.
| Best Sellers Rank | 1,989,778 in Kindle Store ( See Top 100 in Kindle Store ) 3,917 in Mathematics (Kindle Store) 4,684 in Popular Science Maths 32,523 in Popular Mathematics |
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