- Scott Boorman
Scott Archer Boorman (born
February 1 ,1949 ) is a mathematical sociologist atYale University . He earned his B.A. in Applied Mathematics fromHarvard University , and was a Harvard Junior Fellow. He received his Ph.D. inSociology from Harvard University and was appointed to a full professorship at Penn before moving to Yale. He is also a graduate ofYale Law School .His book, "Genetics of Altruism" (1980) uses mathematical population genetics to analyze the development of sociality and altruism through three modes of selection: group, kin and reciprocity.
While still a teenager, Boorman wrote "The Protracted Game : A Wei-Ch'i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy" (1971), an analysis of the U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Basically, he shows that the U.S. thought it was playing
Chess , while in fact the game was Wei-Ch'i (also known as Go).He systematically explores the similarity between the military strategies of Chinese Communist insurgency and the Chinese board game wei-ch’i, in contrast to parallel U.S. analyses of the same events. Boorman also argues that wei-chi's analysis of a strategic system presents a more sophisticated and flexible form ofgame theory than the traditional western models of strategic choice.External links
* [http://www.yale.edu/sociology/faculty/pages/boorman/ Faculty website at Yale]
* [http://www.yale.edu/sociology/faculty/pages/boorman/vitaScottBoorman.pdf List of publication]
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