The evolution of power and the divergence of cooperative norms
Authored by Paul E Smaldino, Michael D Makowsky
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.jebo.2015.09.002
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
Java
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We consider a model of multilevel selection and the evolution of
institutions that distribute power in the form of influence in a group's
collective interactions with other groups. In the absence of direct
group-level interactions, groups with the most cooperative members will
outcompete less cooperative groups, while within any group the least
cooperative members will be the most successful. Introducing group-level
interactions, however, such as raiding or warfare, changes the selective
landscape for groups. Our model suggests that as the global population
becomes more integrated and the rate of intergroup conflict increases, selection increasingly favors unequally distributed power structures, where individual influence is weighted by acquired resources. The
advantage to less democratic groups rests in their ability to facilitate
selection for cooperative strategies-involving cooperation both among
themselves and with outsiders-in order to produce the resources
necessary to fuel their success in inter-group conflicts, while
simultaneously selecting for leaders (and corresponding collective
behavior) who are unburdened with those same prosocial norms. The
coevolution of cooperative social norms and institutions of power
facilitates the emergence of a leadership class of the selfish and has
implications for theories of inequality, structures of governance, non-cooperative personality traits, and hierarchy. Our findings suggest
an amendment to the well-known doctrine of multilevel selection that
``Selfishness beats altruism within groups. Altruistic groups beat
selfish groups.{''} In an interconnected world, altruistic groups led by
selfish individuals can beat them both. (C) 2016 Published by Elsevier
B.V.
Tags
Social networks
behavior
emergence
Institutions
Coevolution
Punishment
Cultural-group selection
Large-scale cooperation
Complex societies
Hunter-gatherers