Why Humans Cooperate: A Cultural and Evolutionary Explanation
Joseph Henrich (Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Emory University),Natalie Henrich (Adjunct Professor, Department of Anthropology, Adjunct Professor, Department of Anthropology, Emory University)
Why Humans Cooperate: A Cultural and Evolutionary Explanation
Joseph Henrich (Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Emory University),Natalie Henrich (Adjunct Professor, Department of Anthropology, Adjunct Professor, Department of Anthropology, Emory University)
Cooperation among humans is one of the keys to our great evolutionary success. Natalie and Joseph Henrich examine this phenomena with a unique fusion of theoretical work on the evolution of cooperation, ethnographic descriptions of social behavior, and a range of other experimental results. Their experimental and ethnographic data come from a small, insular group of middle-class Iraqi Christians called Chaldeans, living in metro Detroit, whom the Henrichs use as an example to show how kinship relations, ethnicity, and culturally transmitted traditions provide the key to explaining the evolution of cooperation over multiple generations.
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