reviewScienceDec 8, 2006Closed access

Five Rules for the Evolution of Cooperation

Harvard University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Cooperation is needed for evolution to construct new levels of organization. Genomes, cells, multicellular organisms, social insects, and human society are all based on cooperation. Cooperation means that selfish replicators forgo some of their reproductive potential to help one another. But natural selection implies competition and therefore opposes cooperation unless a specific mechanism is at work. Here I discuss five mechanisms for the evolution of cooperation: kin selection, direct reciprocity, indirect reciprocity, network reciprocity, and group selection. For each mechanism, a simple rule is derived that specifies whether natural selection can lead to cooperation.

Citation impact

5,816
total citations
FWCI
360.02
Percentile
100%
References
69
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Reciprocity (cultural anthropology)
  • Natural selection
  • Kin selection
  • Selection (genetic algorithm)
  • Multicellular organism
  • Mechanism (biology)
  • Biological evolution
  • Group selection
No related works found for this paper.