articleScienceMar 18, 2010Closed access

Markets, Religion, Community Size, and the Evolution of Fairness and Punishment

University of British Columbia · California Institute of Technology · +16 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Large-scale societies in which strangers regularly engage in mutually beneficial transactions are puzzling. The evolutionary mechanisms associated with kinship and reciprocity, which underpin much of primate sociality, do not readily extend to large unrelated groups. Theory suggests that the evolution of such societies may have required norms and institutions that sustain fairness in ephemeral exchanges. If that is true, then engagement in larger-scale institutions, such as markets and world religions, should be associated with greater fairness, and larger communities should punish unfairness more. Using three behavioral experiments administered across 15 diverse populations, we show that market integration…

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1,401
total citations
FWCI
256.30
Percentile
100%
References
41
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Authors

14

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Perspective (graphical)
  • Punishment (psychology)
  • Social exchange theory
  • Trustworthiness
  • Sociology
  • Social psychology
  • Scale (ratio)
  • Positive economics
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