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Is inequity in society unavoidable? A few lessons from Evolutionary Game Theory  | with Cailin O'Connor

Is inequity in society unavoidable? A few lessons from Evolutionary Game Theory | with Cailin O'Connor

Game Changer - the game theory podcast

January 18, 202222m 28s

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Show Notes

In this episode we talk to Cailin O'Connor about inequity in society and how it can be modeled using evolutionary game theory. She explains that few conditions like the division of groups into social categories such as gender or race suffice to lead to stable inequitable patterns which persist over time. We discuss implications when it comes to gender and the division of labour or bargaining situations and why it is so difficult to break inequitable patterns.

Cailin O'Connor is professor of Logic and Philosophy of Science at UC Irvine. In her research she focusses on philosophy of biology and science, and evolutionary game theory. She is author of several books, such as "Games in the Philosophy of Biology", "The Misinformation Age: How False Beliefs Spread" and "The Origins of Unfairness: Social Categories and Cultural Evolution".