Publication | Closed Access
Friendship and the Banker's Paradox: Other Pathways to the Evolution of Adaptations for Altruism
582
Citations
21
References
1996
Year
Unknown Venue
Behavioral Decision MakingEducationSocial InfluenceSocial SciencesClassical DefinitionFitness CostSocial CapitalKin SelectionSocial IdentityCognitive MachineryAltruismMutualistic InteractionApplied Social PsychologyOther PathwaysProsocial BehaviorSocial BehaviorEvolutionary BiologySociologySocial Exchange Theory
Summary. The classical definition of altruism in evolutionary biology requires that an organism incur a fitness cost in the course of providing others with a fitness benefit. New insights are gained, however, by exploring the implications of an adaptationist version of the 'problem of altruism', as the existence of machinery designed to deliver benefits to others. Alternative pathways for the evolution of altruism are discussed, which avoid barriers thought to limit the emergence of reciprocation across species. We define the Banker's Paradox, and show how its solution can select for cognitive machinery designed to deliver benefits to others, even in the absence of traditional reciprocation. These models allow one to understand aspects of the design and social dynamics of human friendship that are otherwise mysterious.
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