进化心理学
社会性
亲属关系
互惠(文化人类学)
心理学
比较心理学
文化心理学
驯化
地球仪
灵长类学
认知科学
社会生物学
社会学习
社会文化进化
社会心理学
认识论
认知心理学
认知
社会学
进化生物学
人类学
生态学
神经科学
哲学
生物
教育学
作者
Joseph Henrich,Michael Muthukrishna
标识
DOI:10.1146/annurev-psych-081920-042106
摘要
Humans are an ultrasocial species. This sociality, however, cannot be fully explained by the canonical approaches found in evolutionary biology, psychology, or economics. Understanding our unique social psychology requires accounting not only for the breadth and intensity of human cooperation but also for the variation found across societies, over history, and among behavioral domains. Here, we introduce an expanded evolutionary approach that considers how genetic and cultural evolution, and their interaction, may have shaped both the reliably developing features of our minds and the well-documented differences in cultural psychologies around the globe. We review the major evolutionary mechanisms that have been proposed to explain human cooperation, including kinship, reciprocity, reputation, signaling, and punishment; we discuss key culture–gene coevolutionary hypotheses, such as those surrounding self-domestication and norm psychology; and we consider the role of religions and marriage systems. Empirically, we synthesize experimental and observational evidence from studies of children and adults from diverse societies with research among nonhuman primates.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI