Results 151 to 160 of about 4,091 (196)
Top-Down Coercive Mechanisms and the Major Transitions in Evolution. [PDF]
Suárez J, Stencel A, Ronai I.
europepmc +1 more source
Hypernetwork modeling and topology of high-order interactions for complex systems. [PDF]
Feng L +11 more
europepmc +1 more source
Polygenic Models of Group Selection for Altruism (Mathematical Topics in Biology)
openaire
利他主義(Altruism)の進化 (Mathematical Topics in Biology : '80 December)
openaire
openaire
A history of the altruism–morality debate in biology
Many different histories of the altruism–morality debate in biology are possible. Here, I offer one such history, based on the juxtaposition of four pairs of historical figures who have played a central role in the debate. Arranged in chronological order, the four dyads — Huxley and Kropotkin, Fisher and Emerson, Wynne-Edwards and Williams, and ...
Oren Harman
+4 more sources
EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY AND HUMAN ALTRUISM: A REVIEW OF THREE BOOKS
In Unto Others,2 Elliott Sober, a noted philosopher of evolutionary biology, and David Sloan Wilson, a lifelong student of group selection, argue from evolutionary theory, philosophy, and psychology that, despite today's nearly exclusive preoccupation with self-interest, ultimately altruistic motives also influence human action.
Egbert Giles Leigh
+4 more sources
The psychology and biology of altruism
Altruism is selfless concern for the welfare of others. It is a traditional virtue in many cultures, and central to many religious traditions. In English, this idea was often described as the Golden rule of ethics. Some newer philosophies such as egoism have criticised the concept, with writers such as Nietzsche arguing that there is no moral ...
Shikha Garg
openaire +2 more sources
Human nature and development aid: IR and the biology of altruism
Research in evolutionary biology and neuroscience has recently entered a domain previously the preserve of philosophers: human morality and altruism. Save for a niche in empirical economics, such research has been widely neglected by social scientists.
Ali Arbia, Gilles Carbonnier
openaire +2 more sources
Hyperstructures and the Biology of Interpersonal Dependence: Rethinking Reciprocity and Altruism
Fluctuations in endogenous opioid activity in the brain, controlled under ordinary conditions by attachment, are capable of producing patterns of dependence in social behavior resembling those appearing in substance abusers. Withdrawal symptoms arising in relation to these fluctuations, short of producing dependence, ordinarily fuel everyday social ...
Thomas S. Smith, Gregory T. Stevens
openaire +2 more sources

