Kinship and altruism: A cross‐cultural experimental study
- 1 May 2007
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in British Journal of Psychology
- Vol. 98 (2) , 339-359
- https://doi.org/10.1348/000712606x129213
Abstract
Humans are characterized by an unusual level of prosociality. Despite this, considerable indirect evidence suggests that biological kinship plays an important role in altruistic behaviour. All previous reports of the influence of kin selection on human altruism have, however, used correlational (rather than experimental) designs, or imposed only a hypothetical or negligible time cost on participants. Since these research designs fail either to control for confounding variables or to meet the criteria required as a test of Hamilton's rule for kin selection (that the altruist pays a true cost), they fail to establish unequivocally whether kin selection plays a role. We show that individuals from two different cultures behave in accordance with Hamilton's rule by acting more altruistically (imposing a higher physical cost upon themselves) towards more closely related individuals. Three possible sources of confound were ruled out: generational effects, sexual attraction and reciprocity. Performance on the task however did not exhibit a perfect linear relationship with relatedness, which might reflect either the intrusion of other variables (e.g. cultural differences in the way kinship is costed) or that our behavioural measure is insufficiently sensitive to fine‐tuned differences in the way individuals view their social world. These findings provide the first unequivocal experimental evidence that kinship plays a role in moderating altruistic behaviour. Kinship thus represents a baseline against which individuals pitch other criteria (including reciprocity, prosociality, obligation and a moral sense) when deciding how to behave towards others.Keywords
This publication has 60 references indexed in Scilit:
- Does attitude similarity serve as a heuristic cue for kinship? Evidence of an implicit cognitive associationEvolution and Human Behavior, 2005
- Nominal kinship cues facilitate altruismProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2002
- Cooperative Reproduction in Ituri Forest Hunter‐Gatherers: Who Cares for Efe Infants?Current Anthropology, 2000
- Group Nepotism and Human KinshipCurrent Anthropology, 2000
- Margaret Mead in SamoaScience, 1999
- Kinship Network, Direct Childcare, and Fertility Among Hungarians and GypsiesEvolution and Human Behavior, 1998
- Kin and Nonkin under Collective Threat: Israeli Networks during the Gulf WarSocial Forces, 1994
- Gender and helping behavior: A meta-analytic review of the social psychological literature.Psychological Bulletin, 1986
- The Evolution of Reciprocal AltruismThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1971
- The genetical evolution of social behaviour. IJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1964