Hi Cameron, nice to see you here : ) what are your thoughts on a critique like: human prosocial behavior/values only look the way they look and hold stable within-lifetimes, insofar as we evolved in + live in a world where there are loads of other agents with roughly equal power as ourselves? Do you disagree with that belief?
Hi Joe—likewise! This relationship between prosociality and distribution of power in social groups is super interesting to me and not something I’ve given a lot of thought to yet. My understanding of this critique is that it would predict something like: in a world where there are huge power imbalances, typical prosocial behavior would look less stable/adaptive. This brings to mind for me things like ‘generous tit for tat’ solutions to prisoner’s dilemma scenarios—i.e., where being prosocial/trusting is a bad idea when you’re in situations where the social conditions are unforgiving to ‘suckers.’ I guess I’m not really sure what exactly you have in mind w.r.t. power specifically—maybe you could elaborate on (if I’ve got the ‘prediction’ right in the bit above) why one would think that typical prosocial behavior would look less stable/adaptive in a world with huge power imbalances?
The trite saying that power corrupts is maybe an indication that the social behavior of humans is not super stable under capability increase. Just human social instincts are not enough. But a simulation might show the limits of this and/or allow to engineer that they are stable.
Hi Cameron, nice to see you here : ) what are your thoughts on a critique like: human prosocial behavior/values only look the way they look and hold stable within-lifetimes, insofar as we evolved in + live in a world where there are loads of other agents with roughly equal power as ourselves? Do you disagree with that belief?
Hi Joe—likewise! This relationship between prosociality and distribution of power in social groups is super interesting to me and not something I’ve given a lot of thought to yet. My understanding of this critique is that it would predict something like: in a world where there are huge power imbalances, typical prosocial behavior would look less stable/adaptive. This brings to mind for me things like ‘generous tit for tat’ solutions to prisoner’s dilemma scenarios—i.e., where being prosocial/trusting is a bad idea when you’re in situations where the social conditions are unforgiving to ‘suckers.’ I guess I’m not really sure what exactly you have in mind w.r.t. power specifically—maybe you could elaborate on (if I’ve got the ‘prediction’ right in the bit above) why one would think that typical prosocial behavior would look less stable/adaptive in a world with huge power imbalances?
The trite saying that power corrupts is maybe an indication that the social behavior of humans is not super stable under capability increase. Just human social instincts are not enough. But a simulation might show the limits of this and/or allow to engineer that they are stable.