Disputed Decisions of World War II: Decision Science and Game Theory Perspectives

McFarland
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9781476680040
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ISBN13:
9781476680040
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A former Harvard professor of decision science and game theory draws on those disciplines in this review of controversial strategic and tactical decisions of World War II. Allied leaders--although outstanding in many ways--sometimes botched what now is termed meta-decision making or deciding how to decide. Operation Jubilee, a single-division raid on Dieppe, France, in August 1942, for example, illustrated the pitfalls of groupthink. In the Allied invasion of North Africa three months later, American and British leaders fell victim to the planning fallacy: having unrealistically rosy expectations of an easy victory. In Sicily in the summer of 1943, they violated the millennia-old principle of command unity--now re-endorsed and elaborated on by modern theorists. Had Allied strategists understood the game theory of bluffing, in January 1944 they might well not have landed two-plus divisions at Anzio in Italy.


  • | Author: Mark Thompson
  • | Publisher: McFarland
  • | Publication Date: February 04, 2020
  • | Number of Pages: 213 pages
  • | Language: English
  • | Binding: Paperback
  • | ISBN-10: 1476680043
  • | ISBN-13: 9781476680040
Author:
Mark Thompson
Publisher:
McFarland
Publication Date:
February 04, 2020
Number of pages:
213 pages
Language:
English
Binding:
Paperback
ISBN-10:
1476680043
ISBN-13:
9781476680040