Mutual Aid

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Оглавление
Pablo Servigne. Mutual Aid
CONTENTS
Guide
Pages
MUTUAL AID. The Other Law of the Jungle
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Notes
Foreword
Notes
IntroductionThe age of mutual aid
The law of the jungle
A potentially fatal paralysis
The emergence of another law of the jungle
The construction site of the new century
Notes
1 The history of a forgetting
Everywhere, all the time, and in every colour
Among one’s peers
Between distant cousins
Between dissimilar organizations
Our most distant ancestors, champions of mutual aid in all categories
All the colours of ‘symbiodiversity’
We are an inextricable bundle of interdependencies
Setting the record straight
Why society didn't see it – a story of myths
Kropotkin, the anarchist prince swimming against the tide
Our blinkered society
Why science didn’t see it – a story of genes
Before the 1970s
The life, death and rebirth of sociobiology, 1970–2000
The renaissance of the 2000s
Notes
2 Spontaneous mutual aid
Contrary to popular belief …
Where does Homo œconomicus live?
What emerges in a crisis situation
What emerges from stress and the unknown
How are we to explain these automatisms?
The end of simplistic models
A malleable automatism
Notes
3 Group mechanisms
The hard core of mutual aid: reciprocity
The obligation to give back
The roots of reciprocity
The transition to the group: extended reciprocity
Reputation (indirect reciprocity)
Rewards and punishments (enhanced reciprocity)
Very large groups: invisible reciprocity
Social norms
Institutions
Notes
4 The spirit of the group
A magical moment: when the group becomes one
The sense of security
The sense of equality
The sense of trust
The birth of a superorganism
Towards universal principles? The ‘fundamentals’: putting them into practice
The principles of good governance
Mutual aid taken to the extreme. The dissolution of the self
Collective ecstasy
Group closure
A tragic moment: when mutual aid collapses
Notes
5 Beyond the group
The big bad wolf principle
Competition with other groups
A hostile environment
Reaching a common goal
Can groups provide mutual aid to each other?
Overcoming competition between groups
The same mechanisms as at the lower level
A limit on size?
The opportunity of global disasters
Notes
6 Since the dawn of time
The evolution of human mutual aid
Associating to survive
A band of immature primates
The evolution of mutual aid between peers
‘There is strength in unity’: the power of group selection
‘Winter is coming’: the power of the hostile environment
Other evolutionary forces
The evolution of mutual aid between species
Needing others …
… sometimes it’s mutual …
… and eventually you can’t do without them
The hostile environment, yet again
An endless source of innovation
Mutual aid calls for mutual aid
Transforming yourself in contact with others
Taking it to the next level
How mutual aid changed the face of the world
Notes
Conclusion The new face of mutual aid
Much more than just a law of the jungle
The main principles of mutual aid
Towards a new vision of mutual aid
Notes
Epilogue For which world?
Are we going to kill each other?
Towards another mythology
Beyond humankind
Notes
Appendix On the ‘new sociobiology’
An earthquake in the land of sociobiology
The secret had to lie in the genes
The slow betrayal of the founding father
The power of one man
The various evolutionary forces behind mutual aid
The origins of sociobiology: kinship selection and reciprocal altruism
The discovery of other paths: indirect reciprocity and spatial selection
Towards a more open and complex sociobiology
Notes
POLITY END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT
Отрывок из книги
Pablo Servigne and Gauthier Chapelle
Translated by Andrew Brown
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On the first line there are the mutually beneficial relations between two species (+/+ relations), those that we have just been discussing. They are called mutualisms in general, and symbioses in the particular case where these two species cannot live without each other.
When species tend to politely avoid each other, we speak of coexistence (0/0 relations). This is the case in the Amazon rainforest, for example, among arboreal ants, whose hunting territory is an entire tree (and woe betide any other insects that land on it!). In the evening, the diurnal species returns to its nest and leaves room for the nocturnal species until the early hours of the morning. Our intuition as biologists is nevertheless that the box ‘coexistence’ in our table is a grabbag in which we temporarily store the interactions whose advantages and disadvantages are as yet unclear to ecologists.
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