Focal Coordination and Language in Human Evolution.

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Roger Myerson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

We study game-theoretic models of human evolution to analyze fundamentals of human nature. Rival-claimants games represent common situations in which animals can avoid conflict over valuable resources by mutually recognizing asymmetric claiming rights. Unlike social-dilemma games, rival-claimants games have multiple equilibria which create a rational role for communication, and so they may be good models for the role of language in human evolution. Many social animals avoid conflict by dominance rankings, but intelligence and language allow mutual recognition of more complex norms for determining political rank or economic ownership. Sophisticated forms of economic ownership could become more advantageous when bipedalism allowed adaptation of hands for manufacturing useful objects. Cultural norms for claiming rights could develop and persist across generations in communities where the young have an innate interest in learning from their elders about when one can appropriately claim desirable objects. Then competition across communities would favor cultures where claiming rights are earned by prosocial behavior, such as contributions to public goods. With the development of larger societies in which many local communities share a common culture, individuals would prefer to interact with strangers who identifiably share this culture, because shared cultural principles reduce risks of conflict in rival-claimants games.

人类进化中的焦点协调与语言
我们通过研究人类进化的博弈论模型来分析人性的基本原理。竞争-索取者博弈代表了一种常见的情况,在这种情况下,动物可以通过相互承认不对称的索取权来避免争夺宝贵资源的冲突。与社会两难博弈不同,竞争者-索取者博弈具有多重均衡状态,这为交流创造了合理的作用,因此它们可能是语言在人类进化过程中发挥作用的良好模型。许多社会动物通过支配等级来避免冲突,但智力和语言允许相互承认更复杂的确定政治等级或经济所有权的规范。当两足动物的双手能够制造有用的物品时,复杂的经济所有权形式就会变得更加有利。在年轻人天生有兴趣向长辈学习何时可以适当地要求获得理想的物品的社区中,主张权利的文化规范可以发展起来并世代相传。这样,社区间的竞争就会有利于通过亲社会行为(如对公共产品的贡献)获得权利主张的文化。随着大社会的发展,许多地方社区共享一种共同的文化,个人会更愿意与那些可以识别出共享这种文化的陌生人交往,因为共享的文化原则可以降低在竞争者-索取者博弈中发生冲突的风险。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
8.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Human Nature is dedicated to advancing the interdisciplinary investigation of the biological, social, and environmental factors that underlie human behavior. It focuses primarily on the functional unity in which these factors are continuously and mutually interactive. These include the evolutionary, biological, and sociological processes as they interact with human social behavior; the biological and demographic consequences of human history; the cross-cultural, cross-species, and historical perspectives on human behavior; and the relevance of a biosocial perspective to scientific, social, and policy issues.
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