That seems plausible, and suggests that the low rate of free-riders is causally related to our readiness to call out suspected ones.
This suggests that the right thing to do is to try to reduce the cost, rather than the rate, of false-positives. And surely not to demolish this Chesterton’s Fence without a good replacement fix for the underlying problem.
This suggests it’s more useful to compare human groups and see how they manage the problem, rather than trying to parse the ins and outs of evolutionary psychology.
That seems plausible, and suggests that the low rate of free-riders is causally related to our readiness to call out suspected ones.
This suggests that the right thing to do is to try to reduce the cost, rather than the rate, of false-positives. And surely not to demolish this Chesterton’s Fence without a good replacement fix for the underlying problem.
This suggests it’s more useful to compare human groups and see how they manage the problem, rather than trying to parse the ins and outs of evolutionary psychology.
Agreed.