Evolution of Cooperation - Recommended Reading

Recommended Reading

  • Axelrod, Robert; Hamilton, William D. (27 March 1981), "The Evolution of Cooperation", Science 211: 1390–96, Bibcode 1981Sci...211.1390A, doi:10.1126/science.7466396, PMID 7466396, http://www-personal.umich.edu/~axe/research/Axelrod%20and%20Hamilton%20EC%201981.pdf
  • Axelrod, Robert (1984), The Evolution of Cooperation, Basic Books, ISBN 0-465-02122-0
  • Axelrod, Robert (2006), The Evolution of Cooperation (Revised ed.), Perseus Books Group, ISBN 0-465-00564-0
  • Axelrod, Robert (1997), The Complexity of Cooperation: Agent-Based Models of Competition and Collaboration, Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-01567-8
  • Dawkins, Richard ( 1989), The Selfish Gene (2nd ed.), Oxford Univ. Press, ISBN 0-19-286092-5
  • Gould, Stephen Jay (June 1997), "Kropotkin was no crackpot", Natural History 106: 12–21, http://www.marxists.org/subject/science/essays/kropotkin.htm
  • Ridley, Matt (1996), The Origins of Virtue, Viking (Penguin Books), ISBN 0-670-86357-2
  • Sigmund, Karl; Fehr, Ernest; Nowak, Martin A. (January 2002), "The Economics of Fair Play", Scientific American: 82–87, http://www.ped.fas.harvard.edu/people/faculty/publications_nowak/SciAm02.pdf
  • Trivers, Robert L. (March 1971), "The Evolution of Reciprocal Altruism", Quarterly Review of Biology 46: 35–57, doi:10.1086/406755, http://lis.epfl.ch/~markus/References/Trivers71.pdf
  • Vogel, Gretchen (20 February 2004), "News Focus: The Evolution of the Golden Rule", Science 303 (5661): 1128–31, doi:10.1126/science.303.5661.1128, http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/reprint/303/5661/1128.pdf

Read more about this topic:  Evolution Of Cooperation

Famous quotes containing the words recommended and/or reading:

    There is not a greater paradox in nature,—than that so good a religion [as Christianity] should be no better recommended by its professors.
    Laurence Sterne (1713–1768)

    When committees gather, each member is necessarily an actor, uncontrollably acting out the part of himself, reading the lines that identify him, asserting his identity.... We are designed, coded, it seems, to place the highest priority on being individuals, and we must do this first, at whatever cost, even if it means disability for the group.
    Lewis Thomas (b. 1913)