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Human uniqueness-self-interest and social cooperation
- Source :
- Journal of Theoretical Biology. 253:261-270
- Publication Year :
- 2008
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2008.
-
Abstract
- Humans are unique among all species of terrestrial history in both ecological dominance and individual properties. Many, or perhaps all, of the unique elements of this nonpareil status can be plausibly interpreted as evolutionary and strategic elements and consequences of the unprecedented intensity and scale of our social cooperation. Convincing explanation of this unique human social adaptation remains a central, unmet challenge to the scientific enterprise. We develop a hypothesis for the ancestral origin of expanded cooperative social behavior. Specifically, we present a game theoretic analysis demonstrating that a specific pattern of expanded social cooperation between conspecific individuals with conflicts of interest (including non-kin) can be strategically viable, but only in animals that possess a highly unusual capacity for conspecific violence (credible threat) having very specific properties that dramatically reduce the costs of coercive violence. The resulting reduced costs allow preemptive or compensated coercion to be an instantaneously self-interested behavior under diverse circumstances rather than in rare, idiosyncratic circumstances as in actors (animals) who do not have access to inexpensive coercive threat. Humans are apparently unique among terrestrial organisms in having evolved conspecific coercive capabilities that fulfill these stringent requirements. Thus, our results support the proposal that access to a novel capacity for projection of coercive threat might represent the essential initiating event for the evolution of a human-like pattern of social cooperation and the subsequent evolution of the diverse features of human uniqueness. Empirical evidence indicates that these constraints were, in fact, met only in our evolutionary lineage. The logic for the emergence of uniquely human cooperation suggested by our analysis apparently accounts simply for the human fossil record.
- Subjects :
- Statistics and Probability
Coercion
Event (relativity)
media_common.quotation_subject
Individuality
Biology
Models, Biological
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Game Theory
Humans
Cooperative Behavior
Positive economics
Social Behavior
Empirical evidence
Non-credible threat
media_common
Scientific enterprise
Motivation
General Immunology and Microbiology
Fossils
Ecology
Applied Mathematics
General Medicine
Biological Evolution
Modeling and Simulation
Scale (social sciences)
Self-interest
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Game theory
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00225193
- Volume :
- 253
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Theoretical Biology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ee6f102a3e8d886fa14c00da447cd862
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2008.02.041