The Infinite Game: How to Live Well Together
By Niki Harré
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The Infinite Game - Niki Harré
The Infinite Game
The Infinite Game
How to live well together
Niki Harré
To my father, John Harré
Contents
Introduction – Welcome to the Infinite Game
PART ONE – SOCIETY AND THE INFINITE GAME
Chapter One – Overarching Principles
1. Continuing the play versus winning
2. Infinite and finite values
3. The difference between finite games that are inside or outside the infinite game
Chapter Two – People
4. Invitation versus selection
5. People versus allies, pawns, spectators or competitors
6. Open-ended versus restricted expression
7. Connection versus guarded emotions
8. Freedom versus obligation
Chapter Three – Setting
9. A network versus discrete entities
10. Diversity versus sameness
11. Awe versus control
Chapter Four – Knowledge
12. Seeking information versus claiming knowledge
13. Understanding versus training
Chapter Five – Time
14. Looking to the future versus replicating the past
15. Changing the rules versus maintaining the rules
PART TWO – THE INFINITE PLAYER
Chapter Six – Hold Finite Games Lightly
Chapter Seven – Seek and Express Authenticity
Chapter Eight – Strive for Radical Cooperation
Chapter Nine – Beware the Trickster
Chapter Ten – Reflect and Learn
Postscript – Welcome to the Infinite Game
Author’s Note
Appendix – Infinite Game Workshop Outline
Notes
References
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Welcome to the Infinite Game
Welcome to the infinite game. The infinite game is a game about our times, a game about how to live well together. Everyone is invited. We don’t need you exactly, but whatever you offer will make the game a little better for the rest of us. With a bit of luck, you’ll get something out of it too.
Like any game, the infinite game works best if the players appear to take it seriously. This means that if you want to play, you are asked to concentrate, to try hard, and to act as if it matters. In the end, it does not matter. But if everyone pretends there is some goal, something worth striving towards, it will be a better game. So let’s get started.
In 1986 the philosopher James P. Carse wrote that in life there are at least two kinds of games: finite games and the infinite game. He described these games in a book called Finite and Infinite Games: A Vision of Life as Play and Possibility.¹ I’ve taken some key insights from his book, played with them a little (or a lot), and added some contributions of my own. The characteristics of these games are laid out as a list of fifteen paired features on the following page.
Features of the infinite game and finite games
1. The purpose of the infinite game is to continue the play The purpose of a finite game is to win
2. The infinite game is played with that which we value for its own sake Finite games are played with the values relevant to the game
3. The infinite game includes finite games Finite games may exist outside the infinite game
4. The infinite game invites others in Finite games include only select people
5. Infinite players relate to the humanity in each other In finite games others are allies, pawns, spectators or competitors
6. The infinite game values open-ended expression Finite games value expression only within the mediums and rules set by the game
7. The infinite game may provide a deep sense of connection with others In finite games victory may be joyful but must be guarded
8. Infinite players may come and go Finite players must be alert – to relax is dangerous
9. The infinite game is an open network in which everything is interconnected Finite games are discrete entities that may expand or replicate
10. The infinite game tends towards diversity Finite games tend towards sameness
11. Infinite players are in awe of life in all its forms Finite players attempt to control the life forms relevant to the game
12. The infinite game seeks and responds to information about the world Winners of finite games claim knowledge of the world which may be treated as the truth
13. Infinite players attempt to understand themselves Finite players attempt to train themselves
14. The infinite game looks to the future and does not assume the past will reoccur In finite games players try to replicate the winning strategies of the past
15. The rules of the infinite game must change over time or the game will cease To change or break the rules of a finite game is a violation
Are you starting to get the idea? The features of the infinite game and finite games will be teased out more fully in Part One of this book. For now, to help understand the difference between these two types of games, let’s imagine beach cricket as the infinite game and compare it with a finite game of international cricket. In beach cricket, someone has a tennis ball and ideally a bat of some sort, although a piece of drift-wood will do. Teams are created from whoever is willing; everyone on the beach is invited to play. Age, prior experience with the game, fitness, being able to speak the language of the instigators, none of these are prerequisites to – or protections from – being encouraged to have a go: ‘We’ll teach you – it’ll be fun!’ The rules are set, but most people can’t quite remember them and make lots of mistakes. When it’s a four-year-old boy’s turn to hold the bat, the rules are changed completely: he doesn’t actually have to hit the ball to run, and no one tries to get him out.
Experienced players are often theatrical, exaggerating or slowing down their movements to the laughter and spontaneous applause of others. Experienced players may also focus intensely when up against each other, trying hard to make as many runs as possible or get the opposing player out. The most valued player is not, however, the best cricketer, but the one who has the knack of making everyone feel welcome. He calls for breaks in the play to show those who are uncertain how to hold the bat and run with it to the opposing wicket. She senses when to cajole a shy player into running into the sea after the ball and when to back off and let the player leave the action to others.
People leave the game for a while, switch teams to keep the numbers more or less even, and none of this matters. It doesn’t even matter when a teenager misses a great catch because she is watching a surfer catch a wave, although everyone groans loudly. The truth is, everyone is somewhat distracted by the blue of the ocean, the crunch of the sand, and the oystercatchers’ attempts to crack open shellfish with their long orange beaks.
As a player, you experience moments of deep contentment, wrapped in a warm blanket of goodwill. It is as if you are in a time apart from time, a space apart from space, where no one has anything better to do than simply be together. Perhaps you feel an absurd love for this odd collection of people, whose lives you may know little or nothing about.
International cricket is rather different. For starters, the teams are carefully selected. Have you ever been selected to play cricket for your country? I suspected not. And it would be ridiculous for players to switch sides or to change the rules part way through the game. How would we know which team won? Players must focus completely on the game and all are needed. Missing a great catch because you are texting your girlfriend in the stand is out of the question. And the setting, apart from the cheers and boos of the spectators, is largely irrelevant. The grass on which the game is played has been carefully cut to the right length and the pitch protected overnight to ensure it does not become sticky from unwanted rain or dew. Victory, when it comes, is euphoric for the winners and dismal for the losers. No matter how small the winning margin, the difference between the two outcomes is absolute. The post-game ritual requires the losers to concede defeat and the audience to praise the winners, usually by detailed public discussion of the brilliant plays that led to their triumph.
International cricketers learn their sport by studying the winning strategies of the past. They acquire a coach and train their bodies and minds to be the perfect cricket clone, just fractionally better than what has gone before. In fact, if I was to line up elite sportspeople in front of you and get you to guess their sport – rugby, swimming, gymnastics, middle-distance running – you would probably do very well indeed just by looking at their body shapes.
Like all master finite players, elite cricketers want to control the outcome of the game before it begins. Surprise is to be eliminated. Thus, international cricket, like other finite games, is inherently conservative. Players aim towards a known goal and follow a well-worn path to get there. By contrast, one day’s game of beach cricket is never the same as another’s. The players reconfigure and change the game depending on the tide, the wind and the collective mood. They may even play a different game entirely. A sand-castle city anyone? ‘Come on, I’ll lend you a spade!’
This book is an invitation to imagine life as an infinite game. Just like beach cricket, the infinite game thrives when people offer their talents, look out for each other, and know when to break the rules. It’s a game that deals in joy – the joy of being deeply alive and trusting that others are on your side.
This book is also an invitation to take a critical look at the finite games that surround you. Sure, international cricket has its place; but are the competitive structures that underpin our major institutions (the qualification game, the economic growth game, the housing market game, the funding game, the publishing game, the career game, the patriotism game, the political election game) really the best way to draw out people’s talents, create community and revitalise the natural world? How would life look if we flipped our usual perspective – if we put our finite games aside for a moment and considered instead what we really, truly value and how to keep that in play?
The infinite game is not an invitation to anarchy. Even beach cricket has nominal rules and boundaries. When it comes to life, we do need structure. After all, we need to grow food, build shelters, make clothes, access clean water, care for people who are ill, teach children, respond to collective threats, and much more besides. We also need challenges and goals. We may want to restore a historic building, plant fruit trees, learn how to play the guitar, or get bicycle stands installed at the local library. We may also want to be a good parent, learn to forgive all those dreadful people who have betrayed us in the hope of finally finding inner peace, or give up smoking. We may even want to discriminate between people on some dimension and acknowledge those who are particularly skilled at an activity. To do all this, we need finite games. We need boundaries, allies and rules, and to spend time learning and repeating the games of the past. I’m rather glad, for example, that my doctor has been to medical school and absorbed the rules of Western medicine.
But, over time, finite games often drift from their original purpose. They become distorted and even absurd under the pressure of human foibles. We devise tokens to facilitate exchanges between us and then develop entire industries that treat these tokens as sacred (money and the empires that surround it). We replicate popular consumer goods until every city groans with the weight of products that are identical the world over. We insist that some games, such as our national pride, are so important that they must be maintained at almost any cost. When a finite game takes itself, rather than its purpose, too seriously, we are in trouble. This would be like the experienced players in beach cricket spending every moment of their summer holiday training to beat the other players when, actually, it’s not about the winning. It’s not even, in fact, about the cricket. There’s a bigger game in play.
Why have I written this book? I am a community psychologist at the University of Auckland in New Zealand. I have long been interested in social and environmental activism, and in 2011 I wrote a book called Psychology for a Better World: Strategies to Inspire Sustainability.² The aim of that book was to apply the most interesting and relevant ideas from psychological research to engaging people in sustainability-related issues. Psychology for a Better World was very much about working with people, which is also a core focus of the book you are reading now. This approach stands in contrast to much writing from a psychological perspective, which is about ‘behaviour change’. You probably know the drill: people are failing to recycle, driving their cars too much, or eating the wrong food. If we can identify and manipulate the ‘barriers’ to change and ‘incentives’ for change, we can bring them into line. The hope is that this push, alongside technological advances and the right laws and international agreements, just might save us from the various ills we otherwise seem headed towards.
Well, changing the behaviour of other adults has always seemed to me both patronising and misguided. What we need, if we are going to promote human and ecological flourishing, is people working together on creative solutions, not experts training others like circus animals. The enormous beauty and power of our species lies in our capacity for collective innovation. It is an endless, uncertain task, improving this world of ours and trying to do so with love and joy. It takes both big, powerful players and small, discrete players each working within their sphere of influence – experimenting, adapting, and negotiating new practices; and the policies, laws and technological innovations that help hold these practices in place. We need to ignite that creative capacity in each other – not smother it with assumptions that ‘we’ (whoever ‘we’ may be) know best.
After Psychology for a Better World was published, I found myself giving talks and workshops to numerous groups of inspiring, struggling people full of energy and generosity. They all wanted to contribute in some way to the common good, although the focus of each varied. I met young climate-change activists, social justice-oriented school teachers, volunteers who maintain the health of their local stream, people with a ferocious love of animals who push to abolish factory farming, unionists advocating for a living wage, and eco-fashion designers.
Still, I sensed that we, as people who care about the common good, were missing something. We certainly had the issues covered. You name it, someone is working on it: climate change, child poverty, women’s rights, housing insecurity, protecting native plants and animals, wealth inequality, indigenous people’s loss of land. Where there is injustice and harm, you will also find people refusing, in one form or another, to accept that our current practices are good enough. There are also people demonstrating alternatives to the status quo by living in tiny houses, designing low-carbon urban transport systems, harnessing sustainable energy, farming organically, running cooperative businesses, implementing democratic decision-making, and constructing self-sufficient buildings. And there is no shortage of knowledge, energy and intelligence behind these efforts. Figuring out how to live well together is, after all, our most challenging task. It therefore attracts people who have the imagination and stamina to take on hard problems. Smart people are not all attracted to high-status, money-making positions. Really smart people – even in the conventional sense – want to be part of creating new games, not just winning the old ones.
But, it seemed to me, tackling the various issues that infuriate and inspire us isn’t enough. What if we won the war on climate change? What if women led 50 per cent of the major corporations? What if we found a renewable energy source to run the entire transport system? What if the cooperative became the favoured business model? What if every farm was organic? Is the creation of the collective good life simply the sum of its parts?
I don’t think so. Something must hold those parts together. Otherwise, in our rush to solve this or that problem, we pull against each other and create (sometimes horrific) collateral damage. We sacrifice yet another river to create clean energy, we support yet another military intervention to restore human rights, we get caught in destructive debates about whether jobs or an endangered species are more important, and we compete with each other for funding and attention. Is that really the best we can do? Surely not. It became increasingly obvious to me that the entire debate needs to shift; and it cannot do so unless we figure out what it is we are reaching towards – the underpinning values that we want to live by and the vision of where we are going that makes our actions make sense.³
Hence: the infinite game. As I stated at the beginning of this introduction, the concept of the infinite game was coined by the philosopher James P. Carse. I first heard him speak briefly about the infinite game and finite games on Ideas, a CBC Radio podcast.⁴ I then read his short book on the topic, written in 1986. I immediately knew that here was a metaphor with the power to ignite rich conversations about what it really means to live well together and how our current systems are failing us. I also loved its playfulness. If we approached life as an endless game with mini-games embedded within it, maybe it would liberate us to be braver, more imaginative, and more generous in our support for each other. First and foremost, we might trust that we are part of something, instead of attempting to boost ourselves with narcissistic fantasies about our individual power. (A case in point is the often-quoted claim, usually attributed to cultural anthropologist Margaret Mead, that a ‘small group of thoughtful, committed citizens’ is the only thing that will ‘change the world’. This is not only wrong; it is a recipe for ego inflation, isolation, exhaustion and despair.)
Furthermore, the concept of finite games is an exquisite tool for understanding why and how life so often goes wrong. When we worship winning and hand leadership to the victors of cut-throat, competitive games, what do we expect to be valued in our chambers of power – compassion, wisdom, inclusion, beauty? Hardly. This, I have come to believe, is a key reason why it can be so irrationally difficult for leaders of organisations to implement deeply cooperative, democratic processes. It is not because these leaders are bad, but because they have been trained in a completely different type of game.
So this book is for anyone who is concerned about how we, collectively, are going about life and is looking for alternatives. Carse’s philosophy has informed this book as have the contributions of many other writers about social movements, environmentalism, culture, the human psyche, myth and religion. I have also designed an Infinite Game workshop, structured like a game, and run it with thousands of people. These workshops have produced numerous insights that have informed both my understanding and this book.⁵
In addition, I have drawn on my roots as a psychologist. My background in psychology has taught me to be cautious about making assumptions about people’s motivations. It can be tempting, if you feel the world is a bit of a mess, to assume that the systems that currently cause hurt are motivated by hurtful intent. This is not necessarily, or even usually, the case. I try here to separate the system from the people involved, and tend to assume that most people, most of the time, consider they are acting ‘for the good’, even if ‘good’ does not appear to result. (That includes you and me.)
Part One of this book explores the implications of the infinite game and finite games from the perspective of society: How do our existing social structures appear through the lens of these games? What feelings and behaviours do our finite games engender in the individuals and social groups who enter them? How might society look if we attempted to keep the infinite game in play? I frequently refer to ‘our world’, ‘our society’, or ‘our way of life’, by which I really mean life in industrialised Western nations. This is the world these games are designed to describe. Two additional caveats apply in this regard: in the context of globalisation, much of what I say potentially applies beyond the West; and – in the way of generalisations – there are numerous exceptions to my claims even within the West.
Part Two is person-oriented: What does it mean to be an infinite player and how can we become better at holding the lessons of the infinite game in our lives? Being an infinite player – by which I mean sticking with the inner struggle to contribute to our collective present and future – is not easy. But if you are compelled to play, that is that really; there is no backing out and lying by the pool all day drinking margaritas. Maybe this book will help you, and those you share these ideas with, to muddle through