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Human large-scale cooperation as a product of competition between cultural groups

Sociology

Human large-scale cooperation as a product of competition between cultural groups

C. Handley and S. Mathew

This research, conducted by Carla Handley and Sarah Mathew, delves into the fascinating evolution of human cooperation with unrelated strangers during brief interactions. It uncovers how cultural similarities among groups can predict cooperative behaviors, shedding light on the powerful influence of cultural group selection on our social dynamics.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
A fundamental puzzle of human evolution is how we evolved to cooperate with genetically unrelated strangers in transient interactions. Group-level selection on culturally differentiated populations is one proposed explanation. We evaluate a central untested prediction of Cultural Group Selection theory, by assessing whether readiness to cooperate between individuals from different groups corresponds to the degree of cultural similarity between those groups. We documented the normative beliefs and cooperative dispositions of 759 individuals spanning nine clans nested within four pastoral ethnic groups of Kenya—the Turkana, Samburu, Rendille and Borana. We find that cooperation between groups is predicted by how culturally similar they are, suggesting that norms of cooperation in these societies have evolved under the influence of group-level selection on cultural variation. Such selection acting over human evolutionary history may explain why we cooperate readily with unrelated and unfamiliar individuals, and why humans' unprecedented cooperative flexibility is nevertheless culturally parochial.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Feb 04, 2020
Authors
Carla Handley, Sarah Mathew
Tags
cooperation
cultural group selection
cultural similarity
pastoral ethnic groups
inter-group cooperation
human evolution
cultural variation
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