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Гомология понятия справедливости у человека и других приматов
The Homology of the Concept of Justice in Humans and Other Primates
[journal article]
Abstract This article discusses the evolutionary prerequisites for the formation of the concept of justice, as well as some of its attributive characteristics found in animals. Evolutionary ethics managed to rapidly establish itself as a branch of evolutionary theory. Charles Darwin already believed that our... view more
This article discusses the evolutionary prerequisites for the formation of the concept of justice, as well as some of its attributive characteristics found in animals. Evolutionary ethics managed to rapidly establish itself as a branch of evolutionary theory. Charles Darwin already believed that our moral behavior was at least partially of a pre-rational nature. By the second half of the 20th century, a demand for the justification of prosocial behaviorin terms of evolutionary benefits had finally emerged. Hypothetical constructions, such as mutual altruism and moralistic aggression, have found empirical evidence in the works of S. Brosnan and F. de Waal and raised the question of their possible definition as a prototype of our ideas aboutjustice and fairness. A number of observations and experiments with non-human primatessubsequently confirmed thatthe concepts ofreciprocal altruism and moralistic aggression may be applicable to them. This in turn raised the question of whether we can say that the notions of justice in humans and non-human primates are homologous. In the case of atleast a partially positive answer, this raises the question of how our moral contracts can be modernized according to this knowledge. This paper provides a critical analysis of moral realism on naturalistic groundsin the works of S. Harris and R. Boyd and discusses possible alternativesto it. Societies are heterogeneous in their perceptions of justice, and culture has a strong organizing influence on moral perceptions, butthis does not make evolutionary ethics worthless. Ken Binmore's evolutionary game theory is proposed as a means of resolving moral realist contradictions found in evolutionary ethics. Based on this framework, Binmore offers a way to modernize our moral contracts.... view less
Classification
Philosophy, Ethics, Religion
Free Keywords
evolutionary ethics; moralistic aggression; moral realism; skepticism; moral contract; evolutionary game theory; Binmore; de Waal
Document language
Russian
Publication Year
2019
Page/Pages
p. 100-118
Journal
Sociologija vlasti / Sociology of power, 31 (2019) 3
DOI
http://doi.org/10.22394/2074-0492-2019-3-100-118
ISSN
2074-0492
Status
Published Version; reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0