Abstract
Arising from: E. Fehr & S. Gächter Nature 415, 137–140 (2002); E. Fehr & S. Gächter reply Altruistic punishment is a behaviour in which individuals punish others at a cost to themselves in order to provide a public good. Fehr and Gächter1 present experimental evidence in humans indicating that negative emotions towards non-cooperators motivate punishment, which, in turn, provokes a high degree of cooperation. Using Fehr and Gächter's original data, we provide an alternative analysis of their experiment that suggests that egalitarian motives are more important than motives for punishing non-cooperative behaviour. This finding is consistent with evidence that humans may have an evolutionary incentive to punish the highest earners in order to promote equality, rather than cooperation2.
Similar content being viewed by others
Enjoying our latest content?
Log in or create an account to continue
- Access the most recent journalism from Nature's award-winning team
- Explore the latest features & opinion covering groundbreaking research
or
References
Fehr, E. & Gächter, S. Nature 415, 137–140 (2002).
Boehm, C. Hierarchy in the Forest: The Evolution of Egalitarian Behaviour (Harvard Univ. Press, Cambridge, 1999).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Fowler, J., Johnson, T. & Smirnov, O. Egalitarian motive and altruistic punishment. Nature 433, E1 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature03256
Published:
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nature03256
This article is cited by
-
Social traits and credit card default: a two-stage prediction framework
Annals of Operations Research (2023)
-
Explicit and implicit markers of fairness preeminence in criminal judges
Scientific Reports (2021)
-
Inequality aversion and antisocial punishment
Theory and Decision (2014)
-
Does Inequity Aversion Motivate Punishment? Cleaner Fish as a Model System
Social Justice Research (2012)
-
Egalitarian motives in humans
Nature (2007)


