Difference between revisions of "Sabotage"

From Conservapedia
Jump to: navigation, search
m (Reverted edits by Falconcomeon (Talk); changed back to last version by JLindon)
m (category)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
'''Sabotage''' describes deliberate actions that weaken an opponent. The methods of sabotage include, but are not limited to destruction of property and disruption of the work flow.
 
'''Sabotage''' describes deliberate actions that weaken an opponent. The methods of sabotage include, but are not limited to destruction of property and disruption of the work flow.
 +
 +
'''Sabotage''' has a humorous origin:  "sabots" were wooden shoes that the working class in Europe wore in the 1600s and afterward.  Once the industrial revolution began in the 1700s, workers would throw their "sabots" into any machinery that was malfunctioning in order to derail or stop it.
  
 
==Tournament theory==
 
==Tournament theory==
Line 8: Line 10:
 
As with the [[rat race]] problem, possible countermeasures are decreasing the reward (in order to discourage such behavior) and separating the participants (to decrease the information needed to determine when to use sabotage).
 
As with the [[rat race]] problem, possible countermeasures are decreasing the reward (in order to discourage such behavior) and separating the participants (to decrease the information needed to determine when to use sabotage).
  
[[category:tournament theory]]
+
==See also==
 +
* [[Fourth generation warfare]]
 +
* [[Asymmetric warfare]]
 +
 
 +
[[Category:Fourth Generation Warfare]]
 +
[[Category:Terrorism]]
 +
[[Category:Military]]
 +
[[Category:Tournament Theory]]

Latest revision as of 20:08, July 29, 2016

Sabotage describes deliberate actions that weaken an opponent. The methods of sabotage include, but are not limited to destruction of property and disruption of the work flow.

Sabotage has a humorous origin: "sabots" were wooden shoes that the working class in Europe wore in the 1600s and afterward. Once the industrial revolution began in the 1700s, workers would throw their "sabots" into any machinery that was malfunctioning in order to derail or stop it.

Tournament theory

The basic premise of tournament theory is that the participant with the "best result" (only compared to the other participants, not by some sort of absolute criterion) will get a major reward.

To achieve this aim (become better than all participants), a participant may either increase his own performance or sabotage the others in order to look better without actually having improved.

As with the rat race problem, possible countermeasures are decreasing the reward (in order to discourage such behavior) and separating the participants (to decrease the information needed to determine when to use sabotage).

See also