Culture and the evolution of human cooperation
University of California, Los Angeles · University of California, Davis
Abstract
The scale of human cooperation is an evolutionary puzzle. All of the available evidence suggests that the societies of our Pliocene ancestors were like those of other social primates, and this means that human psychology has changed in ways that support larger, more cooperative societies that characterize modern humans. In this paper, we argue that cultural adaptation is a key factor in these changes. Over the last million years or so, people evolved the ability to learn from each other, creating the possibility of cumulative, cultural evolution. Rapid cultural adaptation also leads to persistent differences between local social groups, and then competition between groups leads to the spread of behaviours that…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 73.42
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 47
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Shame
- Empathy
- Adaptation (eye)
- Social psychology
- Social evolution
- Sociocultural evolution
- Competition (biology)
- Environmental ethics