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Posts tagged egoistic punishment
Egoistic punishment outcompetes altruistic punishment in the spatial public goods game

By Juan Li, Yi Liu, Zhen Wang, Haoxiang Xia

This study explores why individuals are willing to bear the cost of punishing defectors in cooperative settings, offering a new explanation: the punisher's motivation is egoistic rather than altruistic. Egoistic punishment, aimed at recovering personal losses rather than enforcing group norms, proves to be more effective in promoting cooperation across a variety of conditions. Using spatial public goods game models and both peer- and pool-punishment mechanisms, the research shows egoistic punishers can outcompete altruistic ones in promoting collective cooperation. This dynamic holds across different population structures and strategy-update rules. Particularly in pool-punishment settings, egoistic punishment functions better in high-cost, low-fine scenarios, revealing that self-interested motivations may provide a more robust foundation for sustaining public goods. By demonstrating that fairness perceived through self-interest can lead to broader cooperative outcomes, the study challenges conventional assumptions about the purely moral basis of punishment.

(Scientific Reports, 2021, Volume 11, Article Number: 6584, 13p.)