I was not thinking of that particular example/implementation of the concept, there are definitely differences, but the two have a lot in common. Related pieces of the same puzzle, I’m assuming.
My central answer to why things aren’t worse should be clear in post three, which is that competition is very imperfect—and Mazes are a case where suddenly that imperfection is stripped away and you instead have super-perfect competition, and suddenly things are in fact really bad.
We also both have a key place in the model for time scales and shocks, where anyone who runs too close to the edge becomes fragile.
I was not thinking of that particular example/implementation of the concept, there are definitely differences, but the two have a lot in common. Related pieces of the same puzzle, I’m assuming.
My central answer to why things aren’t worse should be clear in post three, which is that competition is very imperfect—and Mazes are a case where suddenly that imperfection is stripped away and you instead have super-perfect competition, and suddenly things are in fact really bad.
We also both have a key place in the model for time scales and shocks, where anyone who runs too close to the edge becomes fragile.