Evolutionary establishment of moral and double moral standards through spatial interactions
Dirk Helbing, Attila Szolnoki, Matjaz Perc, Gyorgy Szabo

TL;DR
This paper uses an evolutionary game theory model with spatial interactions to explain how moral and double moral standards can emerge and spread among individuals through punishment strategies, addressing cooperation dilemmas.
Contribution
It introduces an agent-based model distinguishing four behavioral strategies and demonstrates how punishment strategies facilitate the emergence of moral behavior in spatial settings.
Findings
Moralists can eliminate cooperators through strategy segregation.
Long-term dynamics show significant shifts in system behavior.
Defectors can accelerate moralists' dominance over non-punishing cooperators.
Abstract
Situations where individuals have to contribute to joint efforts or share scarce resources are ubiquitous. Yet, without proper mechanisms to ensure cooperation, the evolutionary pressure to maximize individual success tends to create a tragedy of the commons (such as over-fishing or the destruction of our environment). This contribution addresses a number of related puzzles of human behavior with an evolutionary game theoretical approach as it has been successfully used to explain the behavior of other biological species many times, from bacteria to vertebrates. Our agent-based model distinguishes individuals applying four different behavioral strategies: non-cooperative individuals ("defectors"), cooperative individuals abstaining from punishment efforts (called "cooperators" or "second-order free-riders"), cooperators who punish non-cooperative behavior ("moralists"), and defectors,…
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