Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Science: Human beings were made for creative cooperation
Science: Human beings were made for creative cooperation
Jan 31, 2026 7:38 AM

Popular culture presents the human race petitors in a selfish struggle for the survival of the fittest. However, new scientific research finds that the human race has a natural tendency to cooperate—and that religion increases philanthropic giving and voluntarism during a crisis.

“Humans are quite possibly the world’s best cooperators,” according to a summary by the Templeton World Charity Foundation, which sponsors research into the topic. “Cooperation has never been more relevant” than during the global pandemic of COVID-19.

Scientists have concluded that finding innovative ways to help others crosses all societies.

“Need-based transfers are a universal human trait,” said Athena Aktipis, assistant professor of psychology at Arizona State University and co-director of the Human Generosity Project.

“When people see that someone is in need, and they have the ability to help, very often people spontaneously helpwithout expecting anything in return,” Aktipis said. “This is especially salient during times of disaster.”

She and her fellow researchers observed selfless cooperation everywhere from the Maasai tribe of Kenya to ranchers on the southwestern border, and in locations from Tanzania to Texas, Fiji, and Mongolia.

After they performed in-depth experiments, Aktipis fed the Maasai tribe’s practices into puter model and found that generosity produced better results than a transactional relationship for everyone, every time—including for the charitable party.

This deep-seated drive to cooperate takes its cues from the morality inherent within the broader culture.

“Reputational concerns shape behavior to be prosocial and altruistic,” said Erez Yoeli, the director of MIT’s Applied Cooperation Team.

Much seeming es from the expectations, norms, and mores of our peers. Moral suasion renders government coercion unnecessary.

“People tend to be highly responsive to cues of social pressure, and when they see those cues, they increase giving a lot,” Yoeli said. “Without anybody being aware of it, altruism is all happening under the surface.”

This echoes the view first laid out by Adam Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments. Smith, whose subsequent book The Wealth of Nations popularized the notion of the “invisible hand,” first rose to prominence by promoting the notion of the “impartial spectator.” Much of our es from external pressure, he wrote:

We can never survey our own sentiments and motives, we can never form any judgment concerning them; unless we remove ourselves, as it were, from our own natural station, and endeavour to view them as at a certain distance from us. But we can do this in no other way than by endeavouring to view them with the eyes of other people, or as other people are likely to view them. Whatever judgment we can form concerning them, accordingly, must always bear some secret reference, either to what are, or to what, upon a certain condition, would be, or to what, we imagine, ought to be the judgment of others. We endeavour to examine our own conduct as we imagine any other fair and impartial spectator would examine it. If, upon placing ourselves in his situation, we thoroughly enter into all the passions and motives which influenced it, we approve of it, by sympathy with the approbation of this supposed equitable judge. If otherwise, we enter into his disapprobation, and condemn it.

The innate human tendency toward cooperation can be magnified when religion suffuses society with the value of human life and pelling rationale to help others. People of faith are among society’s most active helpers, said Joseph Bulbulia, the chair of theological and religious studies at the University of Auckland.

His team of researchers found “a lot more volunteering and five times the level of charitable giving among highly religious people” than among secular people. Their philanthropy creates “a massive hidden giving economy.”

Others have quantified the churches’ economic impact on the U.S. economy. The total economic impact of all 344,000 U.S. religious congregations is somewhere between $1.2 trillion and $4.8 trillion—“more than the annual revenues of the top 10 panies, including Apple, Amazon, and bined,” according to a 2016studyby Brian and Melissa Grim.

“Churches,” Bulbulia concludes, “will e much more relevant and important in the longer-term rebuilding phase.”

The Christian church’s greatest contribution to rebuilding after the coronavirus e in erasing artificial divisions created by the ever-increasing politicization of society. Perpetual antagonism quickens the heart of collectivism.

Socialism, which masquerades as cooperation, has perfected the divide-and-conquer strategy. Pope Leo XIII called “the notion that class is naturally hostile to class, and that the wealthy and the working men are intended by nature to live in mutual conflict” the “great mistake” of socialism.

Just as the symmetry of the human frame is the result of the suitable arrangement of the different parts of the body, so in a State is it ordained by nature that these two classes should dwell in harmony and agreement, so as to maintain the balance of the body politic. Each needs the other: capital cannot do without labor, nor labor without capital. Mutual agreement results in the beauty of good order, while perpetual conflict necessarily produces confusion and savage barbarity. Now, in preventing such strife as this, and in uprooting it, the efficacy of Christian institutions is marvelous and manifold. First of all, there is no intermediary more powerful than religion (whereof the Church is the interpreter and guardian) in drawing the rich and the working class together, by reminding each of its duties to the other, and especially of the obligations of justice.

The fact that identity politics has added ethnicity, sex, and gender identity to socialism’s class warfare is this generation’s unique contribution to human iniquity.

Science reveals that the human race’s instinctive and overwhelming es from cooperation, not endless fratricide. In these times, Pope Leo XIII wrote, the best citizens strive “to keep before the eyes of both classes the precepts of duty and the laws of the Gospel,” which “tends to establish harmony among the divergent interests and the various classes pose the body politic.”

Both science and faith hold that we were created for cooperative creativity. A free and virtuous society allows us to fulfill the grace-infused design woven into human nature.

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The RTT Ruse
On February 25th, while Barack Obama chatted about ObamaCare with members of Congress, the Federal Department of Education – lead by its cabinet level chief Arne Duncan who’s also from Chicago – prepped for release to the public his and his boss’s second assault on our freedom; this time a scheme to further intrude on your child’s education. As an announcement from two think tanks put it: “generationally important Tenth Amendment issues [were] opened on two fronts—the prospect of centralizing...
Joseph E. Stiglitz: An Economist in Freefall
In this week’s Acton Commentary, I review a new book by economist Joseph E. Stiglitz, Freefall: America, Free Markets, and the Sinking of the World Economy. Text follows: A rare growth industry following the 2008 financial crisis has been financial mentaries. An apparently endless stream of books and articles from assorted pundits and scholars continues to explain what went wrong and how to fix our present problems. In this context, it was almost inevitable that one Joseph E. Stiglitz would...
Acton Media Alert – Kishore Jayabalan on Vatican Radio
Vatican Radio in Rome turned to Kishore Jayabalan, Director of Instituto Acton, ment on a recent Italian court ruling which held three Google executives criminally responsible for a YouTube video depicting a teenager with Downs Syndrome being bullied. Vatican Radio’s short article on the matter is here; the audio is available via the audio player below. [audio: ...
Popes Say No to Socialism
Popes in Rome have attempted to steer the Catholic flock away from the “seductive” forces of socialist ideologies threatening human liberty, which since the late 1800s have relentlessly plucked away at “the delicate fruit of mature civilizations” as Lord Acton once said. From Pius IX to Benedict XVI, socialism has been viewed with great caution and even as major threat to the demise of all God-loving free civilizations, despite many of their past and present socio-political and economic “sins.” In...
Acton Media Alert: Sirico on the BBC
On Monday, Acton Founder and President Rev. Robert A. Sirico took to the airwaves of the BBC and squared off against Oliver Kamm of the London Times in a spirited debate over the merits of Michael Moore’s latest “documentary,” Capitalism: A Love Story. Audio from the BBC3 show Nightwaves is available via the audio player below. [audio: ...
The Problem of Nuclear Power Proliferation
In today’s Acton Commentary, I examine the overtures President Obama has been making lately to usher in “a new generation of safe, clean nuclear power plants in this country.” I call for in part a “level playing field” for nuclear energy, which includes neither direct subsidy from the government nor bureaucratic obfuscation. The key to the latter point is to avoid the kind of breathless concern over the countries involved in the manufacture of ponents for elements of the stations....
Die Hard — The Welfare State
[news video expired/removed] No, that’s not the new Bruce Willis movie. That’s the spectacle we’re witnessing now of general strikes in Greece in response to proposed austerity measures designed to keep the country from the fiscal abyss — and maybe dragging down other European Union members with it. But Americans shouldn’t be too smug. Despite some very substantial differences in political culture and economic vitality, the United States is showing early signs of the mass hysteria, the widespread delirium tremens...
Acton’s William F. Buckley Tribute Video
Saturday February 27 was the second anniversary of the death of the conservative giant William F. Buckley, Jr. I first saw Buckley in person when Ole Miss hosted Firing Line in 1997. I read National Review in High School even though I admit I did not always understand some of his words at that age. It was a wonderful reminder of the importance of intellectualism and conservatism, and that I still had a lot to learn. The political left too...
The Establishment Clause
The other day with Schools Of Government, I bemoaned the number of undergrads and graduate students in the United States who are stamped by the “academic” majors and programs within universities for the expressed purpose of preparing them for bureaucratic life and perhaps leadership in the municipalities, state and federal governments of these United States. Depending on whose numbers you use, over 25% of our economy is government – and growing. And since government operates on OPM – other people’s...
Preview: R&L Interviews Nina Shea
Nina Shea In the next issue of Religion & Liberty, we are featuring an interview with Nina Shea. The issue focuses on religious persecution with special attention on the ten year anniversary of the fall munism in Eastern Europe. A feature article for this issue written by Mark Tooley is also ing. Tooley is president of the Institute on Religion and Democracy in Washington D.C. In regards to Shea, the portion of the interview below is exclusively for readers of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved