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The Social Motivation Hypothesis for Prosocial Behavior


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Authors

Godman, M 
Nagatsu, M 
Salmela, M 

Abstract

jats:p Existing economic models of prosociality have been rather silent in terms of proximate psychological mechanisms. We nevertheless identify the psychologically most informed accounts and offer a critical discussion of their hypotheses for the proximate psychological explanations. Based on convergent evidence from several fields of research, we argue that there nevertheless is a more plausible alternative proximate account available: the social motivation hypothesis. The hypothesis represents a more basic explanation of the appeal of prosocial behavior, which is in terms of anticipated social rewards. We also argue in favor of our own social motivation hypothesis over Robert Sugden’s fellow-feeling account (due originally to Adam Smith). We suggest that social motivation not only stands as a proximate account in its own right but also provides a plausible scaffold for other more sophisticated motivations (e.g., fellow-feelings). We conclude by discussing some possible implications of the social motivation hypothesis on existing modeling practice. </jats:p>

Description

This is the accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Sage at http://pos.sagepub.com/content/44/5/563.abstract.

Keywords

social motivation, pro-social behavior, fellow-feeling, social norms, team reasoning

Journal Title

Philosophy of the Social Sciences

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0048-3931
1552-7441

Volume Title

44

Publisher

SAGE Publications
Sponsorship
Marion wishes to thank the Volkswagen Foundation whose European Platform for Life Sciences, Mind Sciences, and the Humanities has supported her involvement in the interdisciplinary project on social interaction.