# What Moneyball-for-Everything Has Done to American Culture ![rw-book-cover](https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/TEl9yekltRGiRwNg_SDRsE0zNU4=/0x72:4792x2568/1200x625/media/img/mt/2022/10/darkside_of_moneyball_2/original.jpg) ## Metadata - Author: [[Derek Thompson]] - Full Title: What Moneyball-for-Everything Has Done to American Culture - Category: #articles - URL: https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/archive/2022/10/sabermetrics-analytics-ruined-baseball-sports-music-film/671924/ ## Highlights - The religion scholar James P. Carse wrote that there are two kinds of games in life: finite and infinite. A finite game is played to win; there are clear victors and losers. An infinite game is played to keep playing; the goal is to maximize winning across all participants. Debate is a finite game. Marriage is an infinite game. The midterm elections are finite games. American democracy is an infinite game. A great deal of unnecessary suffering in the world comes from not knowing the difference. A bad fight can destroy a marriage. A challenged election can destabilize a democracy. In baseball, winning the World Series is a finite game, while growing the popularity of Major League Baseball is an infinite game. What happened, I think, is that baseball’s finite game was solved so completely in such a way that the infinite game was lost. - Tags: [[finite games]] [[infinite games]] - As I’ve written before, the quantitative revolution in culture is a living creature that consumes data and spits out homogeneity. - The Nobel laureate particle physicist Frank Wilczek once said that beauty exists as a dance between opposite forces. First, he said, beauty benefits from symmetry, which he defined as “change without change.” If you rotate a circle, it remains a circle, just as reversing the sides of an equation still reveals a truth (2+2=4, and 4=2+2). But beauty also draws from what Wilczek calls “exuberance,” or emergent complexity. Looking up at the interior of a mosque or a cathedral, or gazing at a classic Picasso or Pollock painting, you are seeing neither utter chaos nor a simple symmetry, but rather a kind of synthesis; an artistic dizziness bounded within a sense of order, which gives the whole work an appealing comprehensibility. - Tags: [[beauty]]