More Pages: Morton Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43


A good attemtp at a difficult undertaking...
Recreational ReadGame Theory is a subfield not of mathematics but of economics. This despite the fact that one of the greatest mathematicians, Von Neumann, had invented this and that at the advanced level it demands a good deal of higher math. This is a reason why John Nash won the Nobel for economics - and not a Fields Medal (for mathematics).
I think it's dangerous to make life-and-death decisions based on Game Theory. First, it's hardly a real science, only the application of mathematics to social questions. Second, you can easily make an error in your calculations.
This brings to mind Franklin's moral algebra. He advised a friend (Priestly, I think) on how to make intelligent decisions: by dividing the pros and cons into two columns, then giving a value to each in terms of importance (1-10, for example), adding up both columns and comparing the two sums. The larger sum should be the decision. And then he cautioned that real decisions are not necessarily made in this scientific way, although the exercise really sharpens your thinking. At a minimum it forces you to think of all possible pros and cons of a problem. In the end, though, one big pro/con (or two) may decide the matter. And even then, you can't be sure you've made the right decision because maybe you've forgotten something in the arithmetic. Still this is a rational way to think something through, especially on major questions.
The utility of Game Theory is likely to be much less than Franklin's scheme because PEOPLE IN THE REAL WORLD DON'T BOTHER USING IT. Would Roosevelt and Truman have done much better when dealing with Stalin if they had been acquainted with Game Theory? I doubt it, although Game Theory impressed some of the geeks in the Pentagon. (Nor vice versa. Stalin would have just laughed if somebody had tried to "sell" him this academic exercise. He relied on his own judgment.) To this day I have yet to hear that Game Theory is the secret of success of top managers like Jack Welch, Warren Buffett and Sandy Weill.
This book is a good intro to the field and teaches you the basic vocab specialists use. Read it like a book on recreational brainteasers, and you'll have lots of fun. I know I did.
Recreational ReadThere seems to be a whole cottage industry of books on Game Theory. Not many of them are non-technical, and this is probably the shortest of them. (Another is written by JD Williams: "The Compleat Strategyst" - note the spellings - also from Dover.) So this is a plus to those with no background and who may not go any further. This book suffers from being slightly out of date.
Game Theory is a subfield not of mathematics but of economics. This despite the fact that one of the greatest mathematicians, Von Neumann, had invented this and that at the advanced level it demands a good deal of higher math. This is a reason why John Nash won the Nobel for economics - and not a Fields Medal (for mathematics).
I think it's dangerous to make life-and-death decisions based on Game Theory. First, it's hardly a real science, only the application of mathematics to social questions. Second, you can easily make an error in your calculations.
This brings to mind Franklin's moral algebra. He advised a friend (Priestly, I think) on how to make intelligent decisions: by dividing the pros and cons into two columns, then giving a value to each in terms of importance (1-10, for example), adding up both columns and comparing the two sums. The larger sum should be the decision. And then he cautioned that real decisions are not necessarily made in this scientific way, although the exercise really sharpens your thinking. At a minimum it forces you to think of all possible pros and cons of a problem. In the end, though, one big pro/con (or two) may decide the matter. And even then, you can't be sure you've made the right decision because maybe you've forgotten something in the arithmetic. Still this is a rational way to think something through, especially on major questions.
The utility of Game Theory is likely to much less than Franklin's scheme because PEOPLE IN THE REAL WORLD DON'T BOTHER USING IT. Would Roosevelt and Truman have done much better when dealing with Stalin if they had been acquainted with Game Theory? I doubt it, although Game Theory impressed some of the geeks in the Pentagon. (Nor vice versa. Stalin would have just laughed if somebody had tried to "sell" him this academic exercise. He relied on his own judgment.) To this day I have yet to hear that Game Theory is the secret of success of top managers like Jack Welch, Warren Buffett and Sandy Weill.
Game Theorists themselves disagree on the finer points: Davis in this book points out errors by Anatol Rapoport, for example. This should be enough to give us pause about Game Theory itself.
This book is a good intro to the field and teaches you the basic vocab specialists use. Read it like a book on recreational brainteasers, and you'll have lots of fun. No higher math is required (not even simple algebra) - just a little patience and the motivation to think things through. This is the only low-math intro I know of that covers both 2-person and n-person games of the zero-sum and non-zero-sum varieties in one slim volume.


Deeply concernedThere is a Kurdish issue in Turkey - as the many adverse European Court of Human Rights judgments against Turkey have proved. Human rights violations of the most severe nature continue - including murders, disappearances, torture, rape, fabricated criminal charges, property destruction and more. The assertions by the reviewer that "there is no Kurdistan" and "there is no Kurdish issue in Turkey, but there is a terrorist issue, that is the bloody PKK and its followers..." is clearly not an objective viewpoint. 1) Are you saying the "Kurdish issue" is equatable with "a terrorist issue" - ie all Kurds are terrorists? 2) The PKK has been on ceasefire for over 2 years 3) This ignores the other Kurdish parties such as HADEP, KDP, PUK. In fact, a very big part of the "Kurdish issue" is this very problem - Turkey's labelling of all Kurds as "PKK terrorists" in order to justify human rights violations.
As for "there is no Kurdistan" - although Turkey seeks to obscure its existence, the term has existed since the 13th century (long before Turkey, Iran and Iraq borders were drawn). Kurds were even guaranteed autonomy of it after WW1, but the treaty was ignored because of subsequent diplomatic cowardice. If Kurdistan were formally recognised, it would stretch across the borders of Turkey, Iraq and Iran for some distance of 200,000 square miles - roughly the same as France.
The investments made by Turkey in areas populated by Kurds have been made to rebuild areas destroyed by Turks. This sounds like a positive step - except that the areas are being rebuilt in a way which enables the Turkish state to keep a close eye on Kurdish activities in the regions. Furthermore, it is incorrect to say it has mostly been without the aid of international financial institutions. (eg the enormous GAP project). Why, as the previous reviewer states, should "no foreign elements be allowed into this matter"? While personally I resent globalisation, Turkey cannot reap the benefits of NATO membership, international investment, and seek to join the European Union, without a corresponding loss of sovereignty. (Similarly, while the solutions in the book are described as being "ineffably American" by one of the few decent reviewers here - isn't that really the concomitant of signing international treaties and joining international organisations, as Turkey has volunteered to do?) Most of the authors' recommendations for "solving the Kurdish problems" are already Turkey's legal obligations as a signatory of the European Convention on Human Rights. (The real question is why isn't the international community forcing Turkey to keep its' promises.....) But, as a solution to the problem of Kurdish human rights violations, "stop breaking human rights law you voluntarily signed, Turkey" seems an obvious starting point.
I am extremely cynical that a Kurd in Diyarbakir would seriously maintain there was no Kurdish problem there. Perhaps he means that the Kurdish problem is more concentrated in rural areas, and he does not come across it in daily life in Diyarbakir. This would still acknowledge that a Kurdish problem does exist. If he means there is no Kurdish problem in Turkey... Then I'm afraid I find his claim to be Kurdish very hard to believe.
Just to be even more cynical, there seems enormous disparity between the numbers of readers who have "found the reviews useful" here. Tim Dinch and Diyarbakir Reader - you wouldn't be clicking on your own reviews to recommend them, would you? Perhaps because of large numbers of readers who have found your reviews "unhelpful"... did 87 people *really* find your book review ("I disagree with the author about issues such as Kurdish issue and Kurdistan") helpful?
Turkey's Kurdish Question.Even so, the authors do not guarantee these demanding steps will do the trick, conceding only that they offer a possibility for the present Turkish state to remain intact. But Barkey and Fuller probably overestimate the chances of Americanizing Turkish politics, just as they underestimate the staying power of the Turkish Republic. The region's states (like Lebanon and Iraq) may be held together with string and sealing wax, but they do seem to survive, at no matter what the cost. Even without fulfilling our authors' recommendations, today's Turkey seems likely to remain whole.
Middle East Quarterly, March 1999
Clear Analysis of Kurdish Problem in TurkeyIn the historical account of the book, we see how the Kurds were integrated into the Ottoman Empire as Sunni Muslims. With the new Turkish republic, however, came the nation's undertaking to turkify the people and eradicate any perceived opposition to the republic. The existence of a Kurdish identity posed a threat to that of the Turks; subsequently, policies of assimilation, and a rejection of the Kurdish language and cultural links took hold.
The revolutionary Kurdistan Workers' party (PKK), sought to obtain an independent Kurdish state, which would lie within the established borders of Turkey. The PKK launched military attacks against the state in order to meet their political ends, though the authors have noted that recently the PKK has been moving towards negotiating with Turkey. Turkey opposes any political parties, which represent the Kurds, which has in effect allowed for the PKK to become the dominant force on the Kurdish issue. The authors acknowledge that the Kurdish problem is outside of the PKK alone, and deals with a growing Kurdish identity.
Barkey and Fuller identify the governmental institutions in Turkey where Kurdish policy is dealt with. The institutions and their policies indicate that they believe that the Kurdish problem is characterized by threats to security, and internal order. "Hence, if the violence can be suppressed, then most of the problem will be taken care of" (p. 134). The Kurdish problem is essentially an ethnic one, and it is crucial, as the authors point out, for Turkey to recognize that the Kurdish issue deserves an ethnic solution. In addition to economic reforms and increased political freedoms for the Kurds, the Turkish government must accept the existence of a Kurdish identity and allow them to express their cultural independence. Turkey already has a democratic structure in place and needs to be further democratized.
It is in my opinion that the most consequential argument of Barkey and Fuller's lies in their description of solutions to the Kurdish problem. The authors demonstrate how the Kurdish question in Turkey is far from changing one policy but changing policies and institutions on many different levels. They indicate that a practical and peaceful resolution to the issue lies between the extremes of suppressing a Kurdish identity and creating a Kurdish state, none that provide sound resolutions to the problem.
Ultimately, Turkey has not been able to secure a "trusting" relationship with their citizens. This distrust is evident in the strong military presence and control in the southeast and the illegality of Kurdish political parties. However, it is clear that the Turkish state has not been successful in suppressing the freedoms and identity of the Kurds since they continue to pursue their political goals and make claims to their ethnicity. The fact also remains that, "the state holds virtually all the cards: The Kurds themselves have almost nothing to concede in negotiations ..." (p. 181). Barkey and Fuller appropriately account for the fact that Turkey has issues with dismemberment and finds cultural identities as threats to a broad national identity.
Turkey's southeast region, where Kurds largely reside, suffers from severe economic, political, and social underdevelopment. The southeast is economically poorer relative to the rest of Turkey; characterized by a strong military presence; the Kurds are denied cultural expression; and lack adequate education. Such neglect only exacerbates feelings of Kurdish alienation from the state and separatism. The possibility of creating a pan-Kurdish state will be difficult and may not actually be the best solution, "but preservation of the present Turkish state is still a possibility..." (p. 205). Thus, it is crucial for the Turkish government to implement economic, political and social reforms so that the Kurdish population is recognized as a legitimate ethnic group that can be incorporated into Turkey.
For nations in the West, Turkey is a crucial link to other Muslim countries in the Middle East. For fears of developing a hostile relationship with Turkey, the United States does not apply pressure to change Turkey's policies on the Kurdish issue, since it is a strategic ally to the United States. Turkey still faces some pressures to deal with the Kurdish issue more effectively since it seeks to join the European Union. However, Turkey still struggles to incorporate and effectively solve their ethnic problem in the same way that many other Muslim countries have failed.
The authors of Turkey's Kurdish Question present us with a lucid account of the Kurdish problem in Turkey. The book is a significant contribution to the subject as it brings to light a complicated issue that is not openly discussed in Turkey.The authors provide a number of solutions in their book, which do not necessarily guarantee Turkey's success in dealing with the Kurdish issue. Nothing for that matter truly does. The Kurdish issue is one of great complexity and depends heavily on the acceptance of a Kurdish identity in the Turkish government and it's initiatives to resolve the issue.


Educational, interesting, and depressing
What's the problem?Men are men all over and I applaud Ms Morton for telling it like it is. I laughed and laughed, why? Because it's a very funny book.
Laughed 'till I cried

An excellent introduction to PIC.
Clear, concise, easy to understand.
Pic : Your Personal Introductory CourseThe book gets off to a good start by teaching the reader about the numbering system used with the pic. It then moves on to dealing with the syntax of assembly. I found the explaination of what the various syntax mean in lay mans terms to be a easy read.
I have various other books on the PIC from Mike Predko and David Benson. This book from John Morton in my opinion is better as it does not wander from the topic at hand..It deals with what is required to perform the task of learning to program the PIC.
This book would make an excellent teaching tool for a college as it is well written.


A book written by a murderer, a coward, and a theif
Talk about Dauntless Courage...
Bula Matari "The Rock Breaker" indeed

Not good for me!
ALfred's Adult Piano
For a Piano Dropout

Not if you dislike fish!
Give it some thoughtEven if I don't yet know if it works or not, I've given this book a five-star rating, because Ms. Henner's writing style is charming, the tips she offers as part of the makeover seem useful and the food is easy to prepare (which is an important factor for someone like me that usually lives on microwave food). So, go ahead, if you feel like some change could do you good, try her tips!
GREAT INFORMATION!!!! Thanks, Marilu!!!

Hello Publishers - are you out there?And the text....goes on....and on....and on.....with very humdrum items. How to pick a Christmas tree, how to light it. This information has been included in every Christmas book through the ages. We don't need to have it over and over again. Take away some of those words and put in more OR JUST BIGGER PICTURES!!
This guy is special - make him a special book!!
A "useful" book from Christopher...
Christopher Radko's Heart of Christmas

A lot of wasted tape space for a few goodies!
Narcassitic DrivelThe tape contributed no new or practical knowledge which one could make use of on their own path to growth.
So inspirational

Who actually wrote this story
Fantastic readPresident Mobuto agrees to allow Felter's crack unit to complete the task of removing Che from the Republic of the Congo. With professionals like Lowell, Bellmon, Craig, Thomas, and new recruit Portet, the Americans succeed in their mission of kicking Che out of Africa. However, the versatile Che simply shifts continents to South America.
It has been a dozen years since W.E.B. Griffin released a "Brotherhood of War" novel. Fans of the series and newcomers will agree that the wait for SPECIAL OPS was well worth it as this novel is a tremendous military adventure. The men of the Special Forces seem like real people with everyday problems as well as dealing with a deadly mission. The story line rings true because of the numerous historical tidbits circa 1964 and the political involvement of various leaders in what the crack unit is authorized to do or not do. Mr. Griffin has triumphantly brought back a winner that will send many a reader searching for the previous eight novels (aside to Putnam: think reprints).
Harriet Klausner
A great Griffin bookThe story moves along and the characters are really allowed to develop.
There is the standard romantic stuff that seems to be part and parcel of Griffin's work, as well as the idea that being an officer (or at least a Special Forces noncom) is really "where it's at", but that's part of the fun. Let's face it, the kind of stuff Griffin writes is not about the ordinary soldier. It would be boring writing if it were.
I wonder if he has any more stories like this left. I would be very interested to read them.
The chapters on zero sum games hold together nicely and manage to leave the reader with an understanding of their nature as well as how to arrive at a Pareto-optimal solution. (Small rant: It drives me absolutely bonkers when I hear business school grads tossing around the word "Pareto" as if they had any idea of what they spoke!) When non-zero sum games are introduced, however, Davis simply cannot overcome the complexity of trying to explain multi-variable solutions with mere words. He resorts to quasi-mathematical explanations or makes assumptions that would not be at all obvious to the lay reader.
This book is an excellent refresher in game theory, or a good primer for those with some knowledge of the topic and some intuitive mathematics.