| Literature DB >> 28541171 |
Anders Sandberg, Joao Fabiano.
Abstract
How individuals tend to evaluate the combination of their own and other's payoffs-social value orientations-is likely to be a potential target of future moral enhancers. However, the stability of cooperation in human societies has been buttressed by evolved mildly prosocial orientations. If they could be changed, would this destabilize the cooperative structure of society? We simulate a model of moral enhancement in which agents play games with each other and can enhance their orientations based on maximizing personal satisfaction. We find that given the assumption that very low payoffs lead agents to be removed from the population, there is a broadly stable prosocial attractor state. However, the balance between prosociality and individual payoff-maximization is affected by different factors. Agents maximizing their own satisfaction can produce emergent shifts in society that reduce everybody's satisfaction. Moral enhancement considerations should take the issues of social emergence into account.Entities:
Keywords: altruism; computer simulation; emergence; game theory; moral enhancement; prosociality; selfishness; social value orientation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28541171 DOI: 10.1017/S0963180116001109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Camb Q Healthc Ethics ISSN: 0963-1801 Impact factor: 1.284