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There are at least two
kinds of games: Finite and Infinite.
A finite game is a game that has fixed rules and
boundaries,
that is played for the purpose of winning and
thereby ending the game.
An infinite game has no fixed rules or boundaries.
In an infinite game you play with the boundaries
and the purpose is to continue the game.
Finite players are serious; infinite games are
playful.
Finite players try to control the game, predict
everything that will happen, and set the outcome
in advance.
They are serious and determined about getting
that outcome. They try to fix the future based
on the past.
Infinite players enjoy being surprised.
Continuously running into something one didn't
know will ensure that the game will go on.
The meaning of the past changes depending on what
happens in the future.
All games are inherently voluntary. There might
be consequences of not playing, but there is always
a choice required. Driving in the right side of
the road, shaking people's hands, and paying taxes
are games one has a choice about playing. There
are certain rules and boundaries that appear to
be externally defined, and you choose to follow
them or not. If you stop following them you aren't
playing the game any longer.
There is no rule that says you have to follow
the rules.
All finite games have rules. If you follow the
rules you are playing the game.
If you don't follow the rules you aren't playing.
If you move the pieces in different ways in chess,
you are no longer playing chess.
Infinite players play with rules and boundaries.
They include them as part of their playing.
They aren't taking them serious, and they can
never be trapped by them, because they use rules
and boundaries to play with.
In a theatrical play the actor knows that she
really isn't Ophelia. The audience knows that
she really isn't Ophelia. But if she does a good
job, Ophelia can express herself through the actor.
The playing is most enjoyable when it is both
clear that it is chosen play, that it is the actor
doing it voluntarily, and at the same time it
is so convincing, following the rules well enough
that it seems real.
You can play finite games within an infinite game.
You can not play infinite games within a finite
game.
You can do what you do seriously, because you
must do it, because you must survive to the end,
and you are afraid of dying and other consequences.
Or, you can do everything you do playfully, always
knowing you have a choice, having no need to survive
the way you are, allowing every element of the
play to transform you, taking pleasure in every
surprise you meet. Those are the differences between
finite and infinite players.
These ideas are paraphrased from the delightful
book:
"Finite and Infinite Games - A Vision of Life
as Play and Possibility" by James P. Carse
ISBN 0-345-34184-8, Ballantine, $4.95
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