1. Guilt by association?
- Author
-
Michael J. Deem and Grant Ramsey
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Perspective (graphical) ,Shame ,050109 social psychology ,Guilt by association ,Evolutionary psychology ,Philosophy ,Group selection ,050501 criminology ,Trait ,Selection (linguistics) ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Applied Psychology ,Mechanism (sociology) ,0505 law ,media_common - Abstract
Recent evolutionary perspectives on guilt tend to focus on how guilt functions as a means for the individual to self-regulate behavior and as a mechanism for reinforcing cooperative tendencies. While these accounts highlight important dimensions of guilt and provide important insights into its evolutionary emergence, they pay scant attention to the large empirical literature on its maladaptive effects on individuals. This paper considers the nature of guilt, explores its biological function, and provides an evolutionary perspective on whether it is an individual-level or group selected trait. After surveying philosophical and psychological analyses of guilt, we consider which psychological mechanisms underlie the capacity to experience and act from guilt and whether they point to an emergence of guilt in early humans or to guilt having a longer phylogenetic history. Because guilt is a characteristically social emotion, we then examine its contemporary role in social and legal contexts, which may provide clues to its original biological function. Finally, we provide the outlines of two evolutionary explanations for guilt. We argue that group selection may have promoted the capacity to experience guilt, but that under certain conditions there may have been a positive individual selection force as well.
- Published
- 2016