Speaking of names, the associated press released a story yesterday
More
Colleges Offering Game Theory Courses about new courses on
creating video games. CNN originally used this title and has since
retitled the article
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colleges offer gaming theory courses, and some sites now have the
more accurate title
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Colleges Offering Video Game Courses.
Many fields have historically bad names (like Computer Science) but Game Theory has a
name that invokes an area of study quite different than what it
actually does. Bob Soare led
the charge to change recursion theory to computability theory with
some success. Should the game theory community try to do the same? And
what should they call it?
for a variety of reasons that are probably only of interest to me (but i include some of them below anyway ;-}), i found this post (and the referenced articles) interesting and funny at the same time:
ReplyDelete- when i took a spot survey in a CS 1 (intro) class, more than half the students (freshmen) said they became attracted to computer science because of computer games.
i am not sure these students would like to take game theory courses, though. "what, no coding...why is it called game theory?"
- game/gaming theory seems hot these days (game theory in the CS theory community and gaming in the IT industry)
- the articles mentioned in the post have progressively corrected the title but in the text they still use the term "game theory" to refer to a set of courses. i quickly browsed through RPI's website and they seem to **not** use the term "game theory".
I wonder why coding theory isn't a more popular class...
ReplyDeleteyeah, next thing you know, people will be suggesting to change the name of coding theory (as in error-correcting codes? anyone rememeber...?) because that's not what undergrad CS studnets have in mind when they see 'coding'.
ReplyDeleteMaybe we should suggest using the term "Game Practice" in the context of video games ;)
ReplyDelete"Decision Theory" isn't too bad of a name for "Game Theory". But I don't think "Computer Science" is too bad of a name either; though I get differing answers on why it's a science from those who agree it is.
ReplyDeleteHow about associating the originator's names with the field:)
ReplyDeleteData structures: Tarjan theory
Computational complexity: Cook-Karp theory
Game theory: Von Neumann theory
Algorithms: Knuth theory
On another note, I always felt that the course titled Formal Languages and Automata Theory was the one named right. However, the students called it FLAT, killing the whole idea.
ReplyDeleteIt seemed that the students always called a course with their own name, independent of what the professors wanted it to be called.
Computational Complexity: Hartmanis-Stearns theory
ReplyDeleteThough Cook, Karp and Levin certainly played a big part in bringing it into prominence...
>Algorithms: Knuth theory
ReplyDeleteForgive me, but Algorithms are already named after their creator (Al Gore, father of the Internet).
Sometimes also logicians attract other people than expected, especially when they offer a course in Model Theory...
ReplyDeleteForgive me, but Algorithms are already named after their creator (Al Gore, father of the Internet).
ReplyDeleteI know you're joking, but you're actually half right--they are named for their creator, al-Khwarizmi, a Persian mathematician.
Naming theories after their "founders" is a dangerous proposition. Do we enumerate every single major contributor? By what standard do we measure who gets credit?
a Persian mathematician...
ReplyDeletewho lived in Baghdad.