http://urel.binghamton.edu/PressReleases/2008/May-Jun%2008/5-2%
20Selfish.html

Binghamton, N.Y. -- Just as religions dwell upon the eternal battle 
between good and evil, angels and devils, evolutionary theorists 
dwell upon the eternal battle between altruistic and selfish 
behaviors in the Darwinian struggle for existence. In a new study 
published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 
(PNAS), evolutionary theorists at Binghamton University suggest that 
selfishness might not be such a villain after all.

Omar Tonsi Eldakar and David Sloan Wilson propose a novel solution to 
this problem in their article, which is available in the online Early 
Edition of PNAS  (http://www.pnas.org/papbyrecent.shtml).  They point 
out that selfish individuals have their own incentive to get rid of 
other selfish individuals within their own group.

Eldakar and Wilson consider a behavioral strategy called "Selfish 
Punisher," which exploits altruists and punishes other selfish 
individuals, including other selfish punishers. This strategy might 
seem hypocritical in moral terms but it is highly successful in 
Darwinian terms, according to their theoretical model published in 
PNAS and a computer simulation model published in the Journal of 
Theoretical Biology. Selfish punishers can invade the population when 
rare but then limit each other, preventing the altruists from being 
completely eliminated.

Individuals who behave altruistically are vulnerable to exploitation 
by more selfish individuals within their own group, but groups of 
altruists can robustly out-compete more selfish groups. Altruism can 
therefore evolve by natural selection as long as its collective 
advantage outweighs its more local disadvantage.  All evolutionary 
theories of altruism reflect this basic conflict between levels of 
selection.

It might seem that the local advantage of selfishness can be 
eliminated by punishment, but punishment is itself a form of 
altruism. For instance, if you pay to put a criminal in jail, all law-
abiding citizens benefit but you paid the cost. If someone else pays 
you to put the criminal in jail, this action costs those individuals 
something that other law-abiding citizens didn't have to pay. 
Economists call this the higher-order public goods problem. Rewards 
and punishments that enforce good behavior are themselves forms of 
good behavior that are vulnerable to subversion from within.

Eldakar and Wilson first began thinking about selfish punishment on 
the basis of a study on humans, which indeed showed that the 
individuals most likely to cheat were also most likely to punish 
other cheaters. Similar examples appear to exist in non-human 
species, including worker bees that prevent other workers from laying 
eggs while laying a few of their own.

Is selfish punishment really so hypocritical in moral terms? 
According to Eldakar and Wilson, it can be looked at another way - as 
a division of labor. Altruists `pay' the selfish punishers by 
allowing themselves to be exploited, while the selfish punishers 
return the favor with their second-order altruism. "That way, no one 
needs to pay the double cost required of an altruist who also 
punishes others," says Eldakar. "If so, then the best groups might be 
those that include a few devils along with the angels."

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