Genes, judgments, and evolution : the social and political consequences of distributional and differential conflict

The following argument offers a sharper micro-foundational lens for studying human political and social behavior by demonstrating how political science might better incorporate the theory of evolution into its behavioral models, and by showing that differential conflict occasionally prevails over th...

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Main Author: Meyer, John Michael
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5617
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2012-05-56172015-09-20T17:08:06ZGenes, judgments, and evolution : the social and political consequences of distributional and differential conflictSocial and political consequences of distributional and differential conflictMeyer, John MichaelDistributional conflictResource conflictEvolutionPoliticsPolitical scienceMicro-foundationsJudgmentsNeo-DarwinianDifferential conflict3C AnalysisDifferential cooperationDifferential consensusSocial evolutionSocial scienceConciliationManifest behaviorBinaryCultureSocial conflictCooperationConflictConsensusConflict theoryMemesCultural evolutionCultural rulesThe following argument offers a sharper micro-foundational lens for studying human political and social behavior by demonstrating how political science might better incorporate the theory of evolution into its behavioral models, and by showing that differential conflict occasionally prevails over the materialist conflicts depicted in much of the modern social science literature. I take evolutionary psychology's understanding of manifest behavior as a point of departure, and then analyze the manifest behavior in terms of judgments, which are binary measurements at a particular point of reference; in other words, a given manifest behavior either did or did not occur at a particular point in time. I then show that judgments can 1) transmit from one individual to the next, 2) vary according to predictable adaptive processes, and 3) are either extinguished or flourish dependent upon the process of natural selection; judgments, therefore, meet the three requirements of evolutionary theory. Judgments, rather than genes, better describe the process of human political and social evolution, which becomes especially clear when one assesses the consequences of what I term "differential" outcomes in judgments.text2012-07-24T18:11:46Z2012-07-24T18:11:46Z2012-052012-07-24May 20122012-07-24T18:11:51Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-56172152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5617eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Distributional conflict
Resource conflict
Evolution
Politics
Political science
Micro-foundations
Judgments
Neo-Darwinian
Differential conflict
3C Analysis
Differential cooperation
Differential consensus
Social evolution
Social science
Conciliation
Manifest behavior
Binary
Culture
Social conflict
Cooperation
Conflict
Consensus
Conflict theory
Memes
Cultural evolution
Cultural rules
spellingShingle Distributional conflict
Resource conflict
Evolution
Politics
Political science
Micro-foundations
Judgments
Neo-Darwinian
Differential conflict
3C Analysis
Differential cooperation
Differential consensus
Social evolution
Social science
Conciliation
Manifest behavior
Binary
Culture
Social conflict
Cooperation
Conflict
Consensus
Conflict theory
Memes
Cultural evolution
Cultural rules
Meyer, John Michael
Genes, judgments, and evolution : the social and political consequences of distributional and differential conflict
description The following argument offers a sharper micro-foundational lens for studying human political and social behavior by demonstrating how political science might better incorporate the theory of evolution into its behavioral models, and by showing that differential conflict occasionally prevails over the materialist conflicts depicted in much of the modern social science literature. I take evolutionary psychology's understanding of manifest behavior as a point of departure, and then analyze the manifest behavior in terms of judgments, which are binary measurements at a particular point of reference; in other words, a given manifest behavior either did or did not occur at a particular point in time. I then show that judgments can 1) transmit from one individual to the next, 2) vary according to predictable adaptive processes, and 3) are either extinguished or flourish dependent upon the process of natural selection; judgments, therefore, meet the three requirements of evolutionary theory. Judgments, rather than genes, better describe the process of human political and social evolution, which becomes especially clear when one assesses the consequences of what I term "differential" outcomes in judgments. === text
author Meyer, John Michael
author_facet Meyer, John Michael
author_sort Meyer, John Michael
title Genes, judgments, and evolution : the social and political consequences of distributional and differential conflict
title_short Genes, judgments, and evolution : the social and political consequences of distributional and differential conflict
title_full Genes, judgments, and evolution : the social and political consequences of distributional and differential conflict
title_fullStr Genes, judgments, and evolution : the social and political consequences of distributional and differential conflict
title_full_unstemmed Genes, judgments, and evolution : the social and political consequences of distributional and differential conflict
title_sort genes, judgments, and evolution : the social and political consequences of distributional and differential conflict
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-05-5617
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