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The Evolution of Social Behavior: Examining Motivations for Altruism John Cuchural Storia della Filantropia Professoressa Giuliana Gemelli June 19 th, 2012
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The Human Condition Conscious thought is driven by emotion It is committed to the purposes of survival and reproduction Why does social life exist at all? What is the identity of the driving forces?
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The Invention of Eusociality Eusocial- group members containing multiple generations are prone to perform altruistic acts as part of their division of labor
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Features of Eusociality A common, defensible nest where the group is forced to interact with each other Division of labor amongst the multigenerational group wherein all sacrifice at least some of their interests to the group
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How Natural Selection Creates Social Instincts Behavioral traits, like physiological traits, are hereditary Distinction between Unit and Target Unit- gene or arrangement of genes Target-combination of traits encoded by units and favored/disfavored by the environment
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Some targets acted on by group: communication, division of labor, dominance, and cooperation in performing communal tasks Individual-versus-group selection results in a mix of altruism and selfishness What benefits the group is quite often at odds at what benefits the individual
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Human Eusociality Evaluation by members of group led to difference between insects and humans This led to most successful strategies becoming those mixing altruism, cooperation, competition, domination, reciprocity, defection, and decit
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The Selfish Gene The selfish need for reproduction is what drives all evolution Competition for mates and resources Drawbacks to out-and-out fighting Nobel acts as just a “smart” strategy to survive
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The War of the Sexes Mates share no DNA but have half interest in offspring There is incentive to trick mate into investing more Female’s best interest to refuse sex before ample energy is invested into welfare of offspring Males faithful, Females coy
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Family Ties Based on Hamilton inequality family altruism makes sense on a mathematical level Bee stinging and dying to protect hive However there is a difference between brother and child
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Kin Selection Also known as inclusive-fitness theory States that the more closely related members of a group are, the more likely they are to become an eusocial group Altruism based of collateral gains of relatives at the cost of personal genetic fitness
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Need for a New Theory of Eusociality Hamilton inequality: rb>c r defined as the fraction of genes shared by altruist and recipient Argument with the looseness of the definition of r Multilevel natural selection as a blanket understanding instead
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Wilson’s Steps of Eusocial Evolution Formation of groups Occurrence of preadaptive traits causing groups to be tightly formed (nest-depend) Appearance of mutations that prescribe the persistence of the group (knocking out dispersal behavior) In insects development of workers Development of colony life into superorganisms
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The Origins of Morality and Honor Good and evil a product of multilevel selection where group vs individual selection act in opposition to each other Charity can be seen through lens of indirect reciprocity Naturalistic understanding of morality and the ability to overcome instincts to create a more just world
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Sources Seminar Overview : Darwin’s Medicine: Evolutionary Psychology and its Applications,“Charity giving, philanthropy, and volunteering: Implications from evolutionary and social sciences,” Friday 29 May 2009, University of Kent Wilson, Edward O. The Social Conquest of Earth. 1. New York, New York: Liveright Publishing Corporation, 2012. Dawkins, Richard. The Selfish Gene. 30th anniversary. Oxford University Press, 2006.
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