The study of reinforcement learning, I've found, is incredibly insightful as a way to really force us to operationalize reward functions. I've benefitted from the process of reasoning and exploring RL reward functions.
Sure, I also value game theory, sociology, and psychology as well. People are complex, with culture, identities, imperfect reasoning, and biochemical influences.
That said, one key benefit of RL is the hands-on experimental aspect. You get to play God and see what happens. Surprise triggers cognitive dissonance and drives further questions. In contrast, some academic disciplines become rather enamored with their own theories, to the detriment of operationalizing them.
Sure, I also value game theory, sociology, and psychology as well. People are complex, with culture, identities, imperfect reasoning, and biochemical influences.
That said, one key benefit of RL is the hands-on experimental aspect. You get to play God and see what happens. Surprise triggers cognitive dissonance and drives further questions. In contrast, some academic disciplines become rather enamored with their own theories, to the detriment of operationalizing them.