Individuality and entanglement : the moral and material bases of social life / Herbert Gintis.
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode |
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Female Library | HB74.P8 .G46 2017 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000230564 | |
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Main Library | HB74.P8 .G46 2017 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | 1 | Available | STACKS | 51952000230557 |
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HB74.P8 .A49443 2015 Phishing for phools : the economics of manipulation and deception / | HB74.P8 .B32 2017 Behavioural economics : a very short introduction / | HB74.P8 .D43 2016 The foundations of behavioral economic analysis / | HB74.P8 .G46 2017 Individuality and entanglement : the moral and material bases of social life / | HB74.P8 .L479 2009 Freakonomics : a rogue economist explores the hidden side of everything / | HB74.P8 A494 2009 Animal spirits : how human psychology drives the economy, and why it matters for global capitalism / | HB75 .R5785 2015 Economics rules : the rights and wrongs of the dismal science / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 281-340) and indexes.
Gene-culture coevolution -- Zoon politikon : the evolutionary origins of human socio-political systems -- Distributed effectivity : political theory and rational choice -- Power and trust in competitive markets -- Rational choice revealed and defended -- An analytical core for sociology -- The theory of action reclaimed -- The evolution of property -- The sociology of the genome -- Gene-culture coevolution and the internalization of norms -- The economy as complex dynamical system -- The future of the behavioral sciences.
In this book, acclaimed economist Herbert Gintis ranges widely across many fields—including economics, psychology, anthropology, sociology, moral philosophy, and biology—to provide a rigorous transdisciplinary explanation of some fundamental characteristics of human societies and social behavior. Because such behavior can be understood only through transdisciplinary research, Gintis argues, Individuality and Entanglement advances the effort to unify the behavioral sciences by developing a shared analytical framework—one that bridges research on gene-culture coevolution, the rational-actor model, game theory, and complexity theory. At the same time, the book persuasively demonstrates the rich possibilities of such transdisciplinary work. Everything distinctive about human social life, Gintis argues, flows from the fact that we construct and then play social games. Indeed, society itself is a game with rules, and politics is the arena in which we affirm and change these rules. Individuality is central to our species because the rules do not change through inexorable macrosocial forces. Rather, individuals band together to change the rules. Our minds are also socially entangled, producing behavior that is socially rational, although it violates the standard rules of individually rational choice. Finally, a moral sense is essential for playing games with socially constructed rules. People generally play by the rules, are ashamed when they break the rules, and are offended when others break the rules, even in societies that lack laws, government, and jails. Throughout the book, Gintis shows that it is only by bringing together the behavioral sciences that such basic aspects of human behavior can be understood.-- Provided by Publisher.
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