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Invisible Rivals: How We Evolved to Compete in a Cooperative World

Autor Jonathan R Goodman Cuvânt înainte de Robert A. Foley
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 iun 2025
A multidisciplinary view of how our competitive and cooperative natures make us human
 
For centuries, people have argued about whether humans are moral animals—good or bad, cooperative or competitive, altruistic or selfish. The debates continue today, dressed up in the language of modern science. In this book, Jonathan R. Goodman makes the case for synthesizing the two sides. Drawing on insights from anthropology, evolutionary biology, and philosophy, he argues that rather than being fundamentally cooperative or competitive, we are capable of being both—and of exploiting each other when there is an opportunity to do so.
 
The core of invisible rivalry is how we make ourselves and others believe that we are acting cooperatively even as we manipulate those around us for our own benefit. In confronting this collective tendency toward self-interest, Goodman says, we can make the fundamental first step in fixing the breakdown of trust in society. Consequently, we will be better able to combat the myriad issues we face today, including widespread inequality, misinformation in a new technological environment, and climate change.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780300274356
ISBN-10: 0300274351
Pagini: 248
Ilustrații: 8 b-w illus.
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 mm
Editura: Yale University Press
Colecția Yale University Press

Recenzii

“Humans are inherently neither nice nor nasty, but we use cooperative and competitive tools like choosing irons in golf. It is as unsettling a point as it is important, and Jonathan Goodman makes it all but incontrovertible.”—David C. Lahti, The City University of New York
 

“A timely and devastating exposé by a brilliant evolutionary psychologist. Jonathan Goodman argues that evil will triumph so long as good people fail to see that selfishness and double-dealing are basic human traits, to be found in everyone including themselves.”—Nicholas Humphrey, author of Sentience: The Invention of Consciousness
 


Notă biografică

Jonathan R. Goodman is a social scientist based at the Wellcome Sanger Institute and Cambridge Public Health, University of Cambridge. He writes about trust, inequality, and evolutionary theory for publications including the Financial Times, New Scientist, Nature, The Guardian, and Scientific American. He lives in London, UK. Robert A. Foley is emeritus professor of human evolution at the University of Cambridge, a senior fellow of King’s College, Cambridge, a fellow of the Alan Turing Institute, and a fellow of the British Academy. He is based in Cambridge, UK.