Genetic and cultural evolution of cooperation / edited by Peter Hammerstein.

The latest interdisciplinary research on the evolutionary models of cooperation.Current thinking in evolutionary biology holds that competition among individuals is the key to understanding natural selection. When competition exists, it is obvious that conflict arises; the emergence of cooperation,...

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Online Access: Full Text (via MIT Press)
Corporate Author: Dahlem Workshop on Genetic and Cultural Evolution of Cooperation Berlin, Germany
Other Authors: Hammerstein, Peter, 1949-
Format: Conference Proceeding eBook
Language:English
Published: Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press in cooperation with Dahlem University Press, ©2003.
Series:Dahlem workshop reports.
Subjects:

MARC

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245 1 0 |a Genetic and cultural evolution of cooperation /  |c edited by Peter Hammerstein. 
260 |a Cambridge, Mass. :  |b MIT Press in cooperation with Dahlem University Press,  |c ©2003. 
300 |a 1 online resource (xiv, 485 pages) :  |b illustrations. 
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490 1 |a Dahlem workshop report. 
500 |a "Dahlem Workshop reports"--Cover. 
500 |a "Report of the 90th Dahlem Workshop on Genetic and Cultural Evolution of Cooperation, Berlin, June 23-28, 2002." 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references and indexes. 
505 0 |a 1. Understanding Cooperation: An Interdisciplinary Challenge / Peter Hammerstein -- The Role of Cognition and Emotion in Cooperation -- 2. The Strategy of Affect: Emotions in Human Cooperation / Daniel M.T. Fessler and Kevin J. Haley -- 3. Cooperation without Counting: The Puzzle of Friendship -- Joan B. Silk -- 4. Is Strong Reciprocity a Maladaptation? On the Evolutionary Foundations of Human Altruism -- Ernst Fehr and Joseph Henrich -- 5. Why Is Reciprocity So Rare in Social Animals? A Protestant Appeal / Peter Hammerstein -- 6. The Bargaining Model of Depression / Edward H. Hagen -- 7. Group Report: The Role of Cognition and Emotion in Cooperation / Richard McElreath, Rapporteur Timothy H. Clutton-Brock, Ernst Fehr, Daniel MT. Fessler, Edward H. Hagen, Peter Hammerstein, Michael Kosfeld, Manfred Milinski, Joan B. Silk, John Tooby, and Margo I. Wilson. 
505 0 |a Markets and Exploitation in Mutualism and Symbiosis -- 8. Does Market Theory Apply to Biology? / Samuel Bowles and Peter Hammerstein -- 9. Biological Markets: The Ubiquitous Influence of Partner Choice on the Dynamics of Cleaner Fish -- Client Reef Fish Interactions / Redouan Bshary and Ronald Noe -- 10. The Scope for Exploitation within Mutualistic Interactions / Judith L. Bronstein -- 11. By-product Benefits, Reciprocity, and Pseudoreciprocity in Mutualism / OlofLeimar and Richard C. Connor -- 12. The Red King Effect: Evolutionary Rates and the Division of Surpluses in Mutualisms / Carl T. Bergstrom and Michael Lachmann -- 13. Group Report: Interspecific Mutualism -- Puzzles and Predictions / Carl T. Bergstrom, Rapporteur Judith L. Bronstein, Redouan Bshary, Richard C. Connor, Martin Daly, Steven A. Frank, Herbert Gintis, Laurent Keller, OlofLeimar, Ronald Nöe, and David C. Queller -- Genomic and Intercellular Cooperation: Distribution of Power and Division of Labor -- 14. Power in the Genome: Who Suppresses the Outlaw? / Rolf F. Hoekstra -- 15. The Transition from Single Cells to Multicellularity / Eörs Szathmdry and Lewis Wolpert -- 16. Cooperation and Conflict Mediation during the Origin of Multicellularity / Richard E. Michod. 
505 0 |a 17. Mitochondria and Programmed Cell Death: "Slave Revolt" or Community Homeostasis? / Neil W. Blackstone and Thomas B.L. Kirkwood -- 18. Group Report: Cooperation and Conflict in the Evolution of Genomes, Cells, and Multicellular Organisms / Michael Lachmann, Rapporteur Neil W. Blackstone, David Haig, Axel Kowald, Richard E. Michod, Eörs Szathmary, John H. Werren, and Lewis Wolpert Cooperation in Human Societies -- 19. Cultural Evolution of Human Cooperation / Peter J. Richerson, Robert T. Boyd, and Joseph Henrich -- 20 .The Power of Norms / H. Peyton Young -- 21. Human Cooperation: Perspectives from Behavioral Ecology / Eric A. Smith -- 22 .Origins of Human Cooperation / Samuel Bowles and Herbert Gintis -- 23. Group Report: The Cultural and Genetic Evolution of Human Cooperation / Joseph Henrich, Rapporteur Samuel Bowles, Robert T. Boyd, Astrid Hopfensitz, Peter J. Richerson, Karl Sigmund, Eric A. Smith, Franz J. Weissing, and H. Peyton Young. 
520 |a The latest interdisciplinary research on the evolutionary models of cooperation.Current thinking in evolutionary biology holds that competition among individuals is the key to understanding natural selection. When competition exists, it is obvious that conflict arises; the emergence of cooperation, however, is less straightforward and calls for in-depth analysis. Much research is now focused on defining and expanding the evolutionary models of cooperation. Understanding the mechanisms of cooperation has relevance for fields other than biology. Anthropology, economics, mathematics, political science, primatology, and psychology are adopting the evolutionary approach and developing analogies based on it. Similarly, biologists use elements of economic game theory and analyze cooperation in "evolutionary games." Despite this, exchanges between researchers in these different disciplines have been limited. Seeking to fill this gap, the 90th Dahlem Workshop was convened. This book, which grew out of that meeting, addresses such topics as emotions in human cooperation, reciprocity, biological markets, cooperation and conflict in multicellularity, genomic and intercellular cooperation, the origins of human cooperation, and the cultural evolution of cooperation; the emphasis is on open questions and future research areas. The book makes a significant contribution to a growing process of interdisciplinary cross-fertilization on this issue. 
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