Why Humans Cooperate: A Cultural and Evolutionary ExplanationCooperation among humans is one of the keys to our great evolutionary success. Natalie and Joseph Henrich examine this phenomena with a unique fusion of theoretical work on the evolution of cooperation, ethnographic descriptions of social behavior, and a range of other experimental results. Their experimental and ethnographic data come from a small, insular group of middle-class Iraqi Christians called Chaldeans, living in metro Detroit, whom the Henrichs use as an example to show how kinship relations, ethnicity, and culturally transmitted traditions provide the key to explaining the evolution of cooperation over multiple generations. |
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Page vii
... metro Detroit who welcomed Natalie into their lives with openness and warmth. This book grew out of Natalie's dissertation, and both the ethnographic and theoretical work benefited from the guidance that Allen Johnson and Robert Boyd ...
... metro Detroit who welcomed Natalie into their lives with openness and warmth. This book grew out of Natalie's dissertation, and both the ethnographic and theoretical work benefited from the guidance that Allen Johnson and Robert Boyd ...
Page 3
... metro Detroit, as they lived, worked, and socialized at the end of the twentieth century. The community studied in this book is made up of Wrst-, second-, and third-generation Catholic immigrants from Iraq who are predominantly middle ...
... metro Detroit, as they lived, worked, and socialized at the end of the twentieth century. The community studied in this book is made up of Wrst-, second-, and third-generation Catholic immigrants from Iraq who are predominantly middle ...
Page 4
... metro Detroit in working their way through the book. After laying the theoretical foundations of our inquiry in chapters 2 and 3, we open the ethnographic stream in chapter 4 by providing a brief introduction to Chaldean culture and ...
... metro Detroit in working their way through the book. After laying the theoretical foundations of our inquiry in chapters 2 and 3, we open the ethnographic stream in chapter 4 by providing a brief introduction to Chaldean culture and ...
Page 6
... metro Detroit, and a description of the ethnographic Weld methods used. Chapters 5 through 9 further develops each of the major classes of theories of cooperation introduced in chapter 2 by supplying further discussion, reviewing ...
... metro Detroit, and a description of the ethnographic Weld methods used. Chapters 5 through 9 further develops each of the major classes of theories of cooperation introduced in chapter 2 by supplying further discussion, reviewing ...
Page 37
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Contents
3 | |
7 | |
3 Evolutionary Theory and the Social Psychology of Human Cooperation | 35 |
History and the Community Today | 75 |
Kinship Explains Most Cooperative Behavior | 89 |
6 Cooperation through Reciprocity and Reputation | 109 |
7 Social Norms and Prosociality | 133 |
8 Culturally Evolved Social Norms Lead to ContextSpecific Cooperation | 157 |
10 Cooperative Dilemmas in the World Today | 205 |
The Underlying Structure of Cooperation | 215 |
Ethnographic Research Methods and Challenges | 219 |
Constructing the Ethnicity and Cooperation Indices | 225 |
Notes | 229 |
References | 241 |
Index | 255 |
InGroup Preferences and Cooperation | 175 |
Other editions - View all
Why Humans Cooperate: A Cultural and Evolutionary Explanation Joseph Henrich,Natalie Henrich Limited preview - 2007 |
Why Humans Cooperate: A Cultural and Evolutionary Explanation Joseph Henrich,Natalie Henrich Limited preview - 2007 |
Common terms and phrases
altruistic Arabs aVect beliefs beneWts biases Chaldean community Chaldean language chapter coethnics conformist transmission context conWrm cooperative dilemma costly costs cues cultural evolution cultural group selection cultural learning culturally transmitted defect Detroit Dictator Game diVerent diYcult domains donations Dual Inheritance Theory economic environment ethnic group ethnic identity ethnic psychology ethnographic eVect evolved example experimental experiments explain favor genes give gossip grocers Henrich human identiWcation imitation immigrants indirect reciprocity individuals interaction interview involving inXuence Iraq kin psychology kinship Machiguenga markers metro Detroit models Natalie natural selection non-Chaldean one’s oVspring parents partners patterns payoVs person players population predictions preferences prosocial Public Goods Games punish norm violators reciprocity-based recycling rejected relatedness relationship relatives reputational information responder round share situations social groups social norms SouthWeld speciWc strategies success suYciently Telkaif theoretical tion Ultimatum Game vaccination variables Wgure Wnancial Wndings Wrst Wtness