Influential thinkers such as Young, Sugden, Binmore, and Skyrms have developed game-theoretic accounts of the emergence, persistence and evolution of social contracts. Social contracts are sets of commonly understood rules that govern cooperative social interaction within societies. These naturalistic accounts provide us with valuable and important insights into the foundations of human societies. However, current naturalistic theories focus mainly on how social contracts solve coordination problems in which the interests of the individual participants are aligned, not competition problems in which individual interests compete with group interests. In response, I set out to build on those theories and provide a comprehensive naturalistic ac...
This thesis analyzes the concepts of social cooperation of two traditions, the social contract theor...
Philosophers and social scientists have recently turned to game theory and agent-based models to bet...
Current debates in social ontology are dominated by approaches that view institutions either as rule...
Influential thinkers such as Young, Sugden, Binmore, and Skyrms have developed game-theoretic accoun...
Political philosophers have long drawn explicitly or implicitly on claims about the ways in which hu...
In a recent book on The Evolution of Social Contract, Brian Skyrms shows how evolutionary game theor...
This paper is based on the intuition of Dragonetti, an old Neapolitan economist, which argues that a...
Altruistic cooperation, like a typical example of altruistic behavior, is frequently observed in hum...
Social and economic institutions govern how people interact with each other--they define the "rules ...
The present dissertation is an exploration of the effect of diversity on social contract formation a...
Abstract Problems of social coordination can be formalized as non-cooperative games with several equ...
“Cooperation” has distinct meanings in biological and moral contexts. In nature, “cooperation” is co...
We consider a co-evolutionary model of social coordination and network formation where agents may de...
peer-reviewedThis paper addresses the formation of social norms of cooperation through interaction i...
The idea that evolutionary processes natrually propel a state of affairs toward a higher, perhaps mo...
This thesis analyzes the concepts of social cooperation of two traditions, the social contract theor...
Philosophers and social scientists have recently turned to game theory and agent-based models to bet...
Current debates in social ontology are dominated by approaches that view institutions either as rule...
Influential thinkers such as Young, Sugden, Binmore, and Skyrms have developed game-theoretic accoun...
Political philosophers have long drawn explicitly or implicitly on claims about the ways in which hu...
In a recent book on The Evolution of Social Contract, Brian Skyrms shows how evolutionary game theor...
This paper is based on the intuition of Dragonetti, an old Neapolitan economist, which argues that a...
Altruistic cooperation, like a typical example of altruistic behavior, is frequently observed in hum...
Social and economic institutions govern how people interact with each other--they define the "rules ...
The present dissertation is an exploration of the effect of diversity on social contract formation a...
Abstract Problems of social coordination can be formalized as non-cooperative games with several equ...
“Cooperation” has distinct meanings in biological and moral contexts. In nature, “cooperation” is co...
We consider a co-evolutionary model of social coordination and network formation where agents may de...
peer-reviewedThis paper addresses the formation of social norms of cooperation through interaction i...
The idea that evolutionary processes natrually propel a state of affairs toward a higher, perhaps mo...
This thesis analyzes the concepts of social cooperation of two traditions, the social contract theor...
Philosophers and social scientists have recently turned to game theory and agent-based models to bet...
Current debates in social ontology are dominated by approaches that view institutions either as rule...