The Evolution of Psychological Altruism

Gualtiero Piccinini, Armin Schulz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

We argue that there are two different kinds of altruistic motivation: classical psychological altruism, which generates ultimate desires to help other organisms at least partly for those organisms’ sake, and nonclassical psychological altruism, which generates ultimate desires to help other organisms for the sake of the organism providing the help. We then argue that classical psychological altruism is adaptive if the desire to help others is intergenerationally reliable and, thus, need not be learned. Nonclassical psychological altruism is adaptive when the desire to help others is adaptively learnable. This theory opens new avenues for the interdisciplinary study of psychological altruism.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalPhilosophy of Science
Volume85
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1 2018

Disciplines

  • Mathematics
  • Epistemology

Cite this