Multilevel Selection Theory and Major Evolutionary Transitions: Implications for Psychological Science |
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Authors: | David Sloan Wilson Mark Van Vugt Rick O'Gorman |
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Affiliation: | Departments of Biology and Anthropology, Binghamton University;;University of Kent at Canterbury, Canterbury, United Kingdom;and;Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT— The concept of a group as comparable to a single organism has had a long and turbulent history. Currently, methodological individualism dominates in many areas of psychology and evolution, but natural selection is now known to operate at multiple levels of the biological hierarchy. When between-group selection dominates within-group selection, a major evolutionary transition occurs and the group becomes a new, higher-level organism. It is likely that human evolution represents a major transition, and this has wide-ranging implications for the psychological study of group behavior, cognition, and culture. |
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Keywords: | group selection human evolution multilevel selection theory group psychology culture |
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