Santa Fe Institute researcher Samuel Bowles and colleague Jung-Kyoo Choi of
Kyungpook National University in South Korea suggest that the altruistic and
warlike aspects of human nature may have a common evolutionary origin.
Altruism - benefiting fellow group members at a cost to oneself - and parochialism
- hostility toward individuals not of one's own ethnic, racial, or other group
- are common to human nature, but we don't immediately think of them as working
together hand in hand. In fact the unexpected combination of these two behaviors
may have enabled the survival of each trait according to Bowles and Choi.
They show that the two behaviors - which they term "parochial altruism"
- may have in fact coevolved. On the face of it joining parochialism to altruism
is puzzling from an evolutionary perspective because both behaviors reduce one's
payoffs by comparison to what one would gain by avoiding them.
Aggression consumes resources and risks death; altruism, particularly toward
those with whom we have no direct relationship, has the effect of helping other
genes advance at our expense. But parochial altruism could have evolved if parochialism
promoted intergroup hostilities and the combination of altruism and parochialism
contributed to the success of these conflicts.
Using game theoretic analysis and agent-based simulations Bowles and Choi show
that under conditions likely to have been experienced by late Pleistocene and
early Holocene humans neither parochialsim nor altruism would have been viable
singly, but by promoting group conflict, they could have evolved jointly.
"But even if a parochial form of altruism may be our legacy," said
Bowles, "it need not be our fate." He pointed to the many examples
of contemporary altruism extending beyond group boundaries, and the fact that
hostility toward outsiders is often redirected or eliminated entirely in a matter
of years.