Morality Games 295 uncorrelated asymmetries must have. This requires a bit more game theory to illus- trate; the logic is detailed in the section on categorical distinctions but the implica- tions are straightforward: Uncorrelated asymmetries must be discrete (as in who arrived first or whether someone has African ancestry) and cannot be continuous (who is stronger, whether someone has darker skin). Indeed, we challenge the reader to identify a case where our sense of rights depends on surpassing a threshold in a continuous variable (stronger than? darker than?). More generally, an asymmetry must have the characteristic that, when it occurs, every observer believes it occurred with a sufficiently high probability, where the exact level of confidence is deter- mined by the payoffs of the game. This is true of public, explicit speech and hand- shakes, but not innuendos or rumors. (Formally, explicit speech and handshakes induce what game theorists term common p-beliefs.) The Hawk—Dove explanation of our sense of rights also gives useful clarity on when there will be conflict. Conflict will arise if both players receive opposing sig- nals regarding the uncorrelated asymmetry, such as two individuals each believing they arrived first, or when there are two uncorrelated asymmetries that point in conflicting directions, such as when one person invested more and the other arrived first. The former source of conflict appears to be the case in the Israeli—Palestinian conflict. Indeed, both sides pour great resources into demonstrating their early possession, especially Israel, through investments in and public displays of archeol- ogy and history. The latter source of conflict appears to be the case in many of the contested legal disputes in the study by DeScioli and Karpoff (2014) mentioned above. An example is one person finds an object on another’s land. Indeed, this turns out to be a source of many legal conflicts over property rights, and a rich legal tradi- tion has d