Scientists Probe Human Nature—and Discover We are Good, After All
Recent studies find our first impulses are selfless
Helping comes easy
Image: iStock / Nadya Lukic
When it really comes down to it—when the chips are down and the lights
are off—are we naturally good? That is, are we predisposed to act
cooperatively, to help others even when it costs us? Or are we, in our
hearts, selfish creatures?
This fundamental question about human nature has long provided fodder for discussion. Augustine’s doctrine of
original sin proclaimed that all people were born broken and selfish, saved only through the power of divine intervention.
Hobbes,
too, argued that humans were savagely self-centered; however, he held
that salvation came not through the divine, but through the social
contract of civil law. On the other hand, philosophers such as
Rousseau
argued that people were born good, instinctively concerned with the
welfare of others. More recently, these questions about human
nature—selfishness and cooperation, defection and collaboration—have
been brought to the public eye by game shows such as
Survivor and the UK’s
Golden Balls,
which test the balance between selfishness and cooperation by pitting
the strength of interpersonal bonds against the desire for large sums of
money.
But even the most compelling televised collisions between selfishness
and cooperation provide nothing but anecdotal evidence. And even the
most eloquent philosophical arguments mean noting without empirical
data.
A
new set of studies
provides compelling data allowing us to analyze human nature not
through a philosopher’s kaleidoscope or a TV producer’s camera, but
through the clear lens of science. These studies were carried out by a
diverse group of researchers from Harvard and Yale—a
developmental psychologist with a background in evolutionary game theory, a
moral philosopher-turned-psychologist, and a
biologist-cum-mathematician—interested in the same essential question: whether our automatic impulse—our
first instinct—is to act selfishly or cooperatively.
This focus on first instincts stems from the
dual process framework
of decision-making, which explains decisions (and behavior) in terms of
two mechanisms: intuition and reflection. Intuition is often automatic
and effortless, leading to actions that occur without insight into the
reasons behind them. Reflection, on the other hand, is all about
conscious thought—identifying possible behaviors, weighing the costs and
benefits of likely outcomes, and rationally deciding on a course of
action. With this dual process framework in mind, we can boil the
complexities of basic human nature down to a simple question: which
behavior—selfishness or cooperation—is intuitive, and which is the
product of rational reflection? In other words, do we cooperate when we
overcome our
intuitive selfishness with
rational self-control, or do we act selfishly when we override our
intuitive cooperative impulses with
rational self-interest?
To answer this question, the researchers first took advantage of a
reliable difference between intuition and reflection: intuitive
processes operate quickly, whereas reflective processes operate
relatively slowly. Whichever behavioral tendency—selfishness or
cooperation—predominates when people act quickly is likely to be the
intuitive response; it is the response most likely to be aligned with
basic human nature.
The experimenters first examined potential links between processing
speed, selfishness, and cooperation by using 2 experimental paradigms
(the “
prisoner’s dilemma” and a “
public goods game”),
5 studies, and a tot al of 834 participants gathered from both
undergraduate campuses and a nationwide sample. Each paradigm consisted
of group-based financial decision-making tasks and required participants
to choose between acting selfishly—opting to maximize individual
benefits at the cost of the group—or cooperatively—opting to maximize
group benefits at the cost of the individual. The results were striking:
in every single study, faster—that is, more intuitive—decisions were
associated with higher levels of cooperation, whereas slower—that is,
more reflective—decisions were associated with higher levels of
selfishness. These results suggest that our first impulse is to
cooperate—that Augustine and Hobbes were wrong, and that we are
fundamentally “good” creatures after all.
The researchers followed up these correlational studies with a set of
experiments in which they directly manipulated both this apparent
influence on the tendency to cooperate—processing speed—and the
cognitive mechanism thought to be associated with this
influence—intuitive, as opposed to reflective, decision-making. In the
first of these studies, researchers gathered 891 participants (211
undergraduates and 680 participants from a nationwide sample) and had
them play a public goods game with one key twist: these participants
were forced to make their decisions either quickly (within 10 seconds)
or slowly (after at least 10 seconds had passed). In the second,
researchers had 343 participants from a nationwide sample play a public
goods game after they had been primed to use either intuitive or
reflective reasoning. Both studies showed the same pattern—whether
people were forced to use intuition (by acting under time constraints)
or simply encouraged to do so (through priming), they gave significantly
more money to the common good than did participants who relied on
reflection to make their choices. This again suggests that our intuitive
impulse is to cooperate with others.
Taken together, these studies—7 total experiments, using a whopping 2,068 participants—suggest that we are
not intuitively selfish creatures. But does this mean that we our
naturally
cooperative? Or could it be that cooperation is our first instinct
simply because it is rewarded? After all, we live in a world where it
pays to play well with others: cooperating helps us make friends, gain
social capital, and find social success in a wide range of domains. As
one way of addressing this possibility, the experimenters carried out
yet
another study. In this study, they asked 341 participants
from a nationwide sample about their daily interactions—specifically,
whether or not these interactions were mainly cooperative; they found
that the relationship between processing speed (that is, intuition) and
cooperation only existed for those who reported having primarily
cooperative interactions in daily life. This suggests that cooperation
is the intuitive response only for those who routinely engage in
interactions where this behavior is rewarded—that human “goodness” may
result from the acquisition of a regularly rewarded trait.
Throughout the ages, people have wondered about the basic state of human
nature—whether we are good or bad, cooperative or selfish. This
question—one that is central to who we are—has been tackled by
theologians and philosophers, presented to the public eye by television
programs, and dominated the sleepless nights of both guilt-stricken
villains and bewildered victims; now, it has also been addressed by
scientific research. Although no single set of studies can provide a
definitive answer—no matter how many experiments were conducted or
participants were involved—this research suggests that our intuitive
responses, or
first instincts, tend to lead to cooperation rather than selfishness.
Although this evidence does not definitely solve the puzzle of human
nature, it does give us evidence we may use to solve this puzzle for
ourselves—and our solutions will likely vary according to how we define
“human nature.” If human nature is something we must be born with, then
we may be neither good nor bad, cooperative nor selfish. But if human
nature is simply the way we tend to act based on our intuitive and
automatic impulses, then it seems that we are an overwhelmingly
cooperative species, willing to give for the good of the group even when
it comes at our own personal expense.
Are you a scientist who specializes in neuroscience, cognitive
science, or psychology? And have you read a recent peer-reviewed paper
that you would like to write about? Please send suggestions to Mind
Matters editor Gareth Cook, a Pulitzer prize-winning journalist at the
Boston Globe. He can be reached at garethideas AT gmail.com or Twitter @garethideas.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)
Adrian F. Ward is a
doctoral candidate in the Department of Psychology at Harvard
University. His doctoral research is focused on the relationships
between technology, cognition, social relationships, and self-esteem,
and he also studies moral decision-making and the self.
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