悲剧
集体行动
困境
悲剧(事件)
喜剧片
平民
动作(物理)
社会困境
气候变化
经济
法律与经济学
政治经济学
政治学
微观经济学
社会学
法学
生态学
生物
物理
认识论
哲学
文学类
艺术
政治
量子力学
社会科学
作者
Wolfram Barfuß,Jonathan F. Donges,Vítor V. Vasconcelos,Jürgen Kurths,Simon A. Levin
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1916545117
摘要
We will need collective action to avoid catastrophic climate change, and this will require valuing the long term as well as the short term. Shortsightedness and uncertainty have hindered progress in resolving this collective action problem and have been recognized as important barriers to cooperation among humans. Here, we propose a coupled social–ecological dilemma to investigate the interdependence of three well-identified components of this cooperation problem: 1) timescales of collapse and recovery in relation to time preferences regarding future outcomes, 2) the magnitude of the impact of collapse, and 3) the number of actors in the collective. We find that, under a sufficiently severe and time-distant collapse, how much the actors care for the future can transform the game from a tragedy of the commons into one of coordination, and even into a comedy of the commons in which cooperation dominates. Conversely, we also find conditions under which even strong concern for the future still does not transform the problem from tragedy to comedy. For a large number of participating actors, we find that the critical collapse impact, at which these game regime changes happen, converges to a fixed value of collapse impact per actor that is independent of the enhancement factor of the public good, which is usually regarded as the driver of the dilemma. Our results not only call for experimental testing but also help explain why polarization in beliefs about human-caused climate change can threaten global cooperation agreements.
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