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Original Articles

The paradoxes of Utopian game-playing

 

Abstract

In The Grasshopper: Games, Life, and Utopia, Suits maintains the following two theses: (1) game-playing is defined as ‘activity directed towards bringing about a specific state of affairs, using only means permitted by rules, where the rules prohibit more efficient in favour of less efficient means, and where such rules are accepted just because they make possible such activity’ and (2) ‘game playing is what makes Utopia intelligible.’ Observing that these two theses cannot be jointly maintained absent paradox, this essay explores the logical possibility that if (2) is true, then (1) must be false. More specifically, in the tradition of conceptual analysis it is argued that Suits’ definition of game-playing is too narrow inasmuch as it excludes really magnificent Utopian games of significance.

Notes

1. After demonstrating that Suits’ account of game-playing fails to include sprinting, Berman (Citation2013) concludes that sprints are not games. And, insofar as his argument reflects an acceptance of Suits’ principle of inefficiency, I cannot include Berman as a critic of Suits in this regard. Nevertheless, for one who wishes to maintain that sprints are games, it is apparent that Berman raises some significant concerns about Suits’ principle of inefficiency.

2. Several scholars attending to Suits’ Utopian thesis have concluded it to be conceptually constrained, unsubstantiated, unintelligible, absurd, and/or contradictory (Bäck Citation2008; Holowchak Citation2007; Hurka Citation2014; Kretchmar Citation2006, 2008; Thompson Citation2004). Of these, Bäck (Citation2008), Holowchak (Citation2007), and Thompson (Citation2004) take specific issue with Suits’ principle of inefficiency.

3. Prior to his death (Citation2007) Suits was able to defend his definitional formulation (Suits Citation1981, 2006) as well as his proposed inter-relational model (Suits Citation1989, 2004) against a few concerns (Meier Citation1988; Schneider Citation2001; Schneider and Butcher Citation1997). However, it is worth noting that he was not able to respond to any of the later challenges issued against his characterization of the lusory attitude or those advanced against his proposal of a game-playing Utopia, with arguments championing the value and coherence of his theory ultimately left with some of his more sympathetic readers (Bradford Citation2003; Frias Citation2016, 2017; Hurka Citation2006, Citation2014; Innis Citation2001; Kolers Citation2015; Kretchmar Citation2006, 2008; McLaughlin Citation2008; Miah Citation2008; Royce Citation2013; Vossen Citation2000, 2004, 2008a, 2008b, 2014, 2016).

4. I am indebted to the editor, Paul Gaffney, and two anonymous reviewers with the Journal of the Philosophy of Sport for the judicious suggestions designed to enhance the clarity and argumentative impact of this essay.

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