May 23rd, 2009, 2:57 pm
QuoteOriginally posted by: Traden4AlphaThis is an interesting test in the market value of karma and also illustrates the imbedded social calculus of games.It might also be interesting to consider f(X), the function representing the monetary threshold between returning vs keeping the cash as a function of other conditions, X.Hypothesis 1: f(X) declines with distance between home and the location of where the object was found. If we find this object a block from home we would only keep it if it had a greater amount of cash as compared to if we found it on the other side of town or while on vacation.Hypothesis 2: f(X) declines with distance between home and the location of the owner. Regardless of where we find it, if we discover the owner live "near" us, then we wil l return a larger amount of cash. Imagine being on vacation in Indonesia and finding the wallet of someone who lives a few houses down from you. Wouldn't you return a higher threshold of cash than if the wallet was from someone in another country?Hypothesis 3: f(X) increases with our familiarity with the owner. f(X) might approach infinity for close family members and friends (perhaps with a sign-change for that loathsome weird uncle that always starts fights at the family reunions). Acquaintances, coworkers, classmates might enjoy a high f(X). If the owner's name is "familiar" but we've not met them, f(X) would be higher than if the owner is a complete stranger.Agree on karma and interesting about the proximity, but I think that has some nuances. What if your nearest neighbor was Bernie Madoff and the rest of the neighborhood resembled him more closely than say Mother Teresa? In this case, you might reserve the cash, find a way to personally return the case and make your own judgment.That said, what could be purchased with the windfall:$1,000 - jewelry? Tainted tchochtkes are not worth it.$10,000 - travel. Your plane might crash.$100,000 - down payment on a new home. Could burn to the ground with you inside.$1,000,000 - who carries 1 mil in a PDA case? This cash belongs to Tony Soprano. Don' even think abboud it.
Last edited by
Trickster on May 22nd, 2009, 10:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.