In certain economic experiments, some participants willingly pay a cost to punish peers who contribute too little to the public good. Because such punishment can lead to improved group outcomes, this costly punishment has been conceived of as altruistic. Here, we provide evidence that individual variation in the propensity to punish low contributions is unrelated to altruism. First, individual use of punishment was uncorrelated with contribution to the public good, contrary to the hypothesis that punishers are proximally motivated by prosocial preferences. Second, individual use of punishment was positively correlated across situations where the use of punishment is typically group beneficial and situations where the use of punishment is typically group detrimental, as well as across situations of radically different strategic structures. These findings contrast sharply with the premise that the tendency to use punishment can fruitfully be regarded as an adaptation for solving social dilemmas.
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27 May 2014
Research Article|
May 27 2014
‘Altruistic’ and ‘Antisocial’ Punishers are One and the Same* Available to Purchase
Kimmo Eriksson;
Kimmo Eriksson
Centre for the Study of Cultural Evolution, Stockholm University and School of Education, Culture and Communication,
Mälardalen University
, Västerås, Sweden
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Daniel Cownden;
Daniel Cownden
Centre for the Study of Cultural Evolution, Stockholm University,
Sweden and University of St Andrews
, UK
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Micael Ehn;
Micael Ehn
Centre for the Study of Cultural Evolution,
Stockholm University
, Sweden
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Pontus Strimling
Pontus Strimling
Centre for the Study of Cultural Evolution,
Stockholm University and Institute for Futures Studies
, Stockholm, Sweden
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*
This research was supported by the Swedish Research Council [grants 2009-2390 and 2009-2678]. Helpful comments from Brent Simpson, Nikos Nikiforakis, Benedikt Herrmann, and Marilynn Brewer are gratefully acknowledged.
Online ISSN: 2326-6201
Print ISSN: 2326-6198
© 2014 K. Eriksson, D. Cownden, M. Ehn and P. Strimling
2014
K. Eriksson, D. Cownden, M. Ehn and P. Strimling
Licensed re-use rights only
Review of Behavioral Economics (2014) 1 (3): 209–221.
Citation
Eriksson K, Cownden D, Ehn M, Strimling P (2014), "‘Altruistic’ and ‘Antisocial’ Punishers are One and the Same*". Review of Behavioral Economics, Vol. 1 No. 3 pp. 209–221, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/105.00000009
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