Melvin Dresher was a Polish-born American mathematician, notable for developing, with Merrill Flood, the game theoretical model of cooperation and conflict known as the Prisoner"s Dilemma while at Research and Development in 1950.
Education
He obtained his Bachelor of Surgery from Lehigh University in 1933 and his Doctor of Philosophy from Yale University in 1937. The title of his dissertation was "Multi-Groups: A Generalisation of the Notion of Group." Dresher worked as instructor of mathematics, Michigan State College, 1938-1941. Statistician, War Production Board, 1941-1944.
Mathematical physicist, National Defense Research Committee, 1944-1946.
Professor of mathematics, Catholic University, 1946-1947. Research mathematician, Research and Development, from 1948.
Career
Dresher came to the United States in 1923. He was the author of several Research and Development research papers on game theory, and his widely acclaimed The Mathematics of Games of Strategy: Theory and Applications (originally published in 1961 as Games of Strategy: Theory and Applications) continues to be read today. Dresher"s research has been referred to and discussed in a variety of published books, including Prisoner"s Dilemma by William Poundstone and A Beautiful Mind by Sylvia Nasar.