On the use of evolutionary mismatch theories in debating human prosociality

Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 24 (3):305-314 (2021)
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Abstract

According to some evolutionary theorists human prosocial dispositions emerged in a context of inter-group competition and violence that made our psychology parochially prosocial, ie. cooperative towards in-groups and competitive towards strangers. This evolutionary hypothesis is sometimes employed in bioethical debates to argue that human nature and contemporary environments, and especially large-scale societies, are mismatched. In this article we caution against the use of mismatch theories in moral philosophy in general and discuss empirical evidence that puts into question mismatch theories based on parochial prosociality. Evolutionary mismatch theories play at best a rhetorical role in these moral debates and may misrepresent the status of relevant evolutionary research. We finally recommend that moral philosophers interested in the evolutionary literature also engage with dispositions such as xenophilia and social tolerance to counterbalance the focus on psychological mismatches adopted so far.

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2021-05-13

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Andrés Segovia-Cuellar
Ludwig Maximilians Universität, München (PhD)

Citations of this work

What Do Chimeras Think About?Benjamin Capps - 2023 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 32 (4):496-514.
Ethical (mis)use of prehistory.Bert Gordijn & Henk ten Have - 2021 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 24 (3):303-304.

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