Title: Evolution of Morality Lecture 2 Minna Lyons lyonsm2hope'ac'uk
1Evolution of MoralityLecture 2Minna
Lyonslyonsm2_at_hope.ac.uk
- (Chapters 2,3 and 4 in Barrett, Dunbar Lycett,
2002)
2Tinbergens four Whys
- Proximate causes of morality (e.g. emotions)
- Development of morality
- Ultimate (adaptive) function of morality
- Evolution of morality
3Morality and altruism
The problem of altruism
- Altruism any behaviour that has a cost to the
donor and benefits the recipient - Costs and benefits are measured in terms of
evolutionary fitness, the offspring reproduced - Problem of altruism how do nice genes get
transferred from one generation to another - In biology, no true altruism
4Selfish genes VS Group selection
- Wynne-Edwards (1962) Group selection explains
altruism - Dawkins (1975) Selfish gene
- Group Selection is not an Evolutionarily Stable
Strategy (ESS) - Freeloaders do better than altruists. Thus,
altruistic genes should cease to exist
5Frequency dependent selection
- fitness of a phenotype is dependent on its
frequency relative to other phenotypes in a given
population. - Positive frequency dependent selection the
fitness of a phenotype increases as it becomes
more common - Negative frequency dependent selection the
fitness of a phenotype increases as it becomes
less common.
6How does altruism evolve?
- Kin selection
- Reciprocity
- Indirect altruism (reputation)
- Altruism as a costly signal
- Punishment
7Kin selection- degree of relatedness
- Co-efficient of relatedness (r)
- Parent-offspring 0.5
- Individual full sibling 0.5
- Grandparent-grandchild 0.25
- Individual- cousin 0.125
- Individual- identical twin 1.00
8Kin selection-Hamiltons rule
To explain altruism between relatives,
Hamilton(1964) developed the theory of inclusive
fitness. Altruistic behaviour should be observed
if rb - c gt 0 c cost to the donor b
benefit to the recipient r degree of
relatedness of the donor and recipient (e.g.
siblings are related 0.5)
9Game theories-Prisoners Dilemma
- Axelrod (1984) Computer PD Tournament
- Tit for Tat emerged as a winning strategy
Co-operate on the first move, and then mirror the
actions of your opponent - Requires that people meet more than once, and can
detect cheats
10Can we detect cheats?
- Cosmides and Tooby have suggested that people
have a cheat detection module in their brain - Mealey et al (1996), Oda (1997) faces of known
cheaters are remembered better than other faces - Yamagishi et al (2003) Cheaters look different
from co-operators - Can we recognise altruists as well?
11Indirect altruism
- By behaving altruistically, an individual might
gain more prestige within a social group, and be
more likely to receive help from others
indirect altruism - Nowak and Sigmund (1998) altruism can exist if
individuals know the reputation of others - Criticism- altruists are still open for
exploitation by social scroungers-not an ESS
12The public goods dilemma
- Hardin (1968) Tragedy of the commons
- When people use a common good, free-riders do
better (e.g. TV license, clean air) - Legal institutions and punishment an evolved
response? - Moral sentiments (anger, guilt etc) maintain
cooperation?
13What is morality?
- Alexander (1985) Moral system is a society with
rulesrules are agreement about what is permitted
and what is not, about what rewards and
punishments are likely for specific acts, about
what is wrong and what is right - Morality reinforced by the society-
cross-cultural differences?
14- Planalp (1999) to behave morally is to judge
right and wrong, good and bad, and to behave
accordingly - morality comes from within- are there moral
universals?
15How can we explain morality?(Lahti and
Weinstein, 2005Alexander, 1989)
- During human evolution, there was competition
both between and within social groups - Moral behaviour is facultative, and evolved both
for inter and intra-group purposes - People adhere to moral rules when there is an
external threat to the group - Relaxation of morality more likely when the
social group is stable - Both group selection and selfish genes
explanations!
16Taking Stock
- Altruism is a complex phenomenon, one explanation
is unlikely to account for all altruistic actions - In the EEA, humans evolved in small kin-based
groups. It is possible that the evolved
psychological adaptations for altruism reflect
this. - Kin selection and reciprocity alone are not
sufficient explanations for altruism in humans - The role of proximate causes (e.g emotions) in
the evolution of altruism!