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  1. Jan 3, 2024 · Unlike non-human cooperation, human cooperative behaviour is not confined to kinship characteristics; rather, humans can intentionally engage in cooperative behaviour, even with strangers.

  2. We review the major evolutionary mechanisms that have been proposed to explain human cooperation, including kinship, reciprocity (partner choice), reputation, signaling and punishment, discuss key culture-gene coevolutionary hypotheses, such as those surrounding self-domestication and norm psychology, and consider the role of religions, rituals ...

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  3. Jan 10, 2019 · According to an influential recent body of theories in psychology, anthropology, and evolutionary biology, the answer is that humans have evolved moral systems: packages of functional psychological and biological mechanisms that regulate behavior in social dilemmas.

  4. Unlike non-human cooperation, human cooperative behaviour is not confined to kinship characteristics; rather, humans can intentionally engage in cooperative behaviour, even with strangers....

  5. Jun 3, 2019 · The observed patterns of human cooperation are not easily reconciled with theories of kin selection and reciprocity. That said, some supporters have rationalized these findings by evoking ‘mismatch’ explanations.

    • Coren L. Apicella, Joan B. Silk
    • 2019
  6. Jun 1, 2006 · After a general discussion of cooperation in humans, this paper summarizes Dual Inheritance Theory and shows how cultural transmission can be brought under the Darwinian umbrella in order to analyze how culture and genes coevolve and jointly influence human behavior and psychology.

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  8. human cooperation, we review key results related to kinship, direct reciprocity, reputation, pun-ishment, and signaling. For each of these mechanisms, we consider the potential role for both genetic and cultural evolutionary processes in light of research from diverse human populations

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