Abstract
Orbell and Dawes develop a non-game theoretic heuristic that yields a âcooperator's advantageâ by allowing players to project their own âcooperate-defectâ choices onto potential partners (1991, p. 515). With appropriate parameter values their heuristic yields a cooperative environment, but the cooperation depends, simply, on optimism about others' behavior (1991, p. 526). In earlier work, Dawes (1989) established a statistical foundation for such optimism. In this paper, I adapt some of the concerns of Dawes (1989) and develop a game theoretic model based on a modification of the Harsanyi structure of games with incomplete information (1967â1968). I show that the commonly made conjecture that strategic play is incompatible with cooperation and the cooperator's advantage is false