Evolutionary foundations of cooperation and group cohesion
Steven A. Frank

TL;DR
This paper explores how the evolution of cooperation in biological systems informs our understanding of human social behavior, emphasizing the role of biological foundations in shaping cooperation and group cohesion.
Contribution
It highlights the parallels between biological cooperation and human social strategies, providing insights into the evolutionary roots of social cohesion and cooperation.
Findings
Biological cooperation mechanisms inform human social behavior.
Evolutionary processes underpin strategies for group cohesion.
Analogies between biological and human cooperation enhance understanding.
Abstract
In biology, the evolution of increasingly cooperative groups has shaped the history of life. Genes collaborate in the control of cells; cells efficiently divide tasks to produce cohesive multicellular individuals; individual members of insect colonies cooperate in integrated societies. Biological cooperation provides a foundation on which to understand human behavior. Conceptually, the economics of efficient allocation and the game-like processes of strategy are well understood in biology; we find the same essential processes in many successful theories of human sociality. Historically, the trace of biological evolution informs in two ways. First, the evolutionary transformations in biological cooperation provide insight into how economic and strategic processes play out over time--a source of analogy that, when applied thoughtfully, aids analysis of human sociality. Second, humans…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation · Plant and animal studies · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics
