Prosocial behavior involves attempting to improve others' welfare and plays a central role in cooperative social relationships. Among the manifold processes that contribute to prosocial …
Recent studies have proposed that social norms play a key role in motivating human cooperation and in explaining the unique scale and cultural diversity of our prosociality …
Children act prosocially already in their first years of life. Research has shown that this early prosociality is mostly motivated by sympathy for others, but that, over the course of …
F Warneken - Annual review of psychology, 2018 - annualreviews.org
In this review, I propose a new framework for the psychological origins of human cooperation that harnesses evolutionary theories about the two major problems posed by …
The age-old philosophical, biological, and social debate over the basic nature of humans as being “universally selfish” or “universally good” continues today highlighting sharply …
Why do many societies moralize apparently harmless pleasures, such as lust, gluttony, alcohol, drugs, and even music and dance? Why do they erect temperance, asceticism …
Cooperation is widespread in nature, occurring in every taxa on Earth. Nevertheless, the contexts in which cooperation occurs—and the forms it takes—vary widely. In this Review …
The motivation to build and maintain a positive personal reputation promotes prosocial behavior. But individuals also identify with their groups, and so it is possible that the desire …
Why do many people moralize harmless bodily pleasures, such as gluttony, masturbation, and drinking alcohol? In four pre-registered experiments (N> 2,700), we investigated …