Puzzles Cider in Your Ear, Continuing Dilemma, The Last Shall Be First, and More
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In presenting economic puzzles, I have three goals in mind: some puzzles are chosen to stimulate research; others offer examples that will help undergraduate and graduate teaching; all should provide quality distractions during seminars. As usual, this feature begins with several speed puzzles; answers can be found at the end of the problems. Following are several longer puzzles, for which readers are invited nay, challenged, to submit their own answers. The puzzles in this issue focus on betting and voting, and once again include a prisoners' dilemma problem. The column ends with reader mail, including the submitted solutions to "The Best Location in Manhattan," Puzzle 4 in the Summer 1987 issue of this journal. As always, please send your answers and favorite puzzles to: Barry Nalebuff, "Puzzles," c/o Journal of Economic Perspectives, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University, Princeton NJ 08544. Good luck.
[1] Peter C. Ordeshook,et al. Game Theory And Political Theory , 1987 .
[2] Nicholas R. Miller. A New Solution Set for Tournaments and Majority Voting: Further Graph- Theoretical Approaches to the Theory of Voting , 1980 .
[3] R. Porter. Extra-Point Strategy in Football , 1967 .
[4] Darrell Huff,et al. How to Take a Chance , 1964 .
[5] H. Landau. On dominance relations and the structure of animal societies: III The condition for a score structure , 1953 .