Strategic behavior is the key to social interaction, from the
ever-evolving world of living beings to the modern theatre of designed
computational agents. Strategies can make or break participants'
aspirations, whether they are selling a house, playing the stock market,
or working toward a treaty that limits global warming. This book aims at
understanding the phenomenon of strategic behavior in its proper width
and depth. A number of experts have combined forces in order to create a
comparative view of the different frameworks for strategic reasoning in
social interactions that have been developed in game theory, computer
science, logic, linguistics, philosophy, and cognitive and social
sciences. The chapters are organized in three topic-based sections,
namely reasoning about games; formal frameworks for strategies; and
strategies in social situations. The book concludes with a discussion on
the future of logical studies of strategies.