Sexual Selection for Moral Virtues
Miller, G. F. (2007). Sexual Selection for Moral Virtues. The Quarterly Review of Biology, 82 (2): 97-125.
Abstract: Moral evolution theories have
emphasized kinship, reciprocity, group selection, and equilibrium
selection. Yet, moral virtues are also sexually attractive. Darwin
suggested that sexual attractiveness may explain many aspects of human
morality. This paper updates his argument by integrating recent
research on mate choice, person perception, individual differences,
costly signaling, and virtue ethics. Many human virtues may have
evolved in both sexes through mutual mate choice to advertise good
genetic quality, parenting abilities, and/or partner traits. Such
virtues may include kindness, fidelity, magnanimity, and heroism, as
well as quasi-moral traits like conscientiousness, agreeableness,
mental health, and intelligence. This theory leads to many testable
predictions about the phenotypic features, genetic bases, and
social-cognitive responses to human moral virtues.
Source: The Quarterly Review of Biology
(Something interesting I found)Posted: Thursday, March 01, 2007
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