Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Science: Human beings were made for creative cooperation
Science: Human beings were made for creative cooperation
Jan 13, 2026 3:57 PM

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
Roadmap Out Of The Nihilistic Void
In a gutsy, thoughtful article attheAmerican Thinker , Danusha V. Goska describes her intellectual journey from a family of card-carrying Communists to discovering she wanted to spend time with people “building, cultivating, and establishing, something that they loved.” There’s a lot to mull over in Goska’s piece, but it was her discovery of a moral and religious framework that struck me. Rather than a “nihilistic void” that had been her life, Goska encountered people whose faith informed their actions in...
Explainer: The Obamacare Subsidies Ruling (Halbig v. Burwell)
What just happened with Obamacare? In a two-to-one decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit dealt a serious blow to Obamacare by ruling the government may not provide subsidies to encourage people to buy health insurance on the new marketplaces run by the federal government. What did the court decide? Section 36B of the Internal Revenue Code, enacted as part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) makes tax credits available as a...
Who Pays for Detroit’s Water?
As I was poring over the morning news the other day, it seemed to me that every few days there is another water crisis somewhere; whether it’s California’s drought, or more recently the controversial decision in which the Detroit panies shut off the water supply to over 15,000 customers. But are we really looking at water regulation, appropriation, and the morality of shutting water off in the correct light? Let’s start with some of the basics: Water is essential for...
Audio: Elise Hilton on The Manufactured Border Crisis
Elise Hilton has been writing a good deal lately about our manufactured border crisis, and last week Al Kresta, host of Kresta in the Afternoon on the Ave Maria Radio Network, asked Elise to join him on his show to discuss the human tide currently engulfing the southern border of the United States. They discuss the response – or lack thereof – of the Obama Administration to the crisis, the underlying causes of the problem, and how the failures of...
Religion & Liberty: An Interview with Uwe Siemon-Netto
Next year will mark the 40th anniversary of the Fall of Saigon and the end of America’s involvement in Vietnam. Uwe Siemon-Netto, a German, and former journalist for United Press International, covered much of the conflict in Vietnam. He has a new and excellent book titled, Triumph of the Absurd: A Reporter’s Love for the Abandoned People of Vietnam. Siemon-Netto is a Lutheran theologian and his extensive background in journalism and theology gives him tremendous credibility in discussing today’s media...
For the Good of Mankind, Side With the Consumer
Should we always take the side of the individual consumer? That’s the question Rod Dreher asks in a recent post on “Amazon and the Cost of Consumerism.” It’s a good question, one that people have been asking for centuries. The best answer that has been provided—as is usually the case when es to economic questions—was provided by the nineteenth-century French journalist Frédéric Bastiat. Bastiat argues, rather brilliantly, that, consumption is the great end and purpose of political economy; that good...
The Idle Rich
Over at his blog, Peter Boettke writes, “The idle rich are never really idle in a free market economy.” Now while we might want to distinguish between the rich and their riches, could it be that even in their consumption, conspicuous or otherwise, the rich are contributing to a rising tide that lifts all boats? Wesley Gant makes that related case over at Values & Capitalism: “Is It Possible to Waste Money?” Gant seems to conclude that it isn’t possible...
Watch ‘The Economy of Love’ for FREE on Flannel (Today Only)
For today and today only, you can watch Episode 2 of For the Life of the World: Letters to the Exiles for FREE over at Flannel.org. Produced by the Acton Institute and spread across seven episodes, the series seeks to examine the bigger picture of Christianity’s role in culture, society, and the world. Episode 2 focuses specifically on the Economy of Love, and the grand mystery we find therein. As host Evan Koons concludes: “Family is the first and foundational...
The Economics Of Sex
Economics, at first glance, doesn’t seem very…well…sexy. It’s all about numbers, right? How the stock market is doing, how much people are willing to spend on stuff they need or want, whether or not people have jobs. That’s economics, right? As the Rev. Robert Sirico is fond of saying, economics is fundamentally about human action. If this is true, then economics applies to sexual activity as well. In the following video (from the Austin Institute), today’s sexual landscape is examined...
Skirting The Law: Five U.S. Territories Now Exempt From Obamacare
Last week was a busy one, news-wise, and this may have slipped by you. Suddenly, 4.5 million people in the 5 U.S. territories (American Somoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands) are now exempt from Obamacare. Just like that. What’s the story? Obamacare costs too darn much, and insurance providers were fleeing the U.S. territories, leaving many without insurance or at least affordable insurance. These territories have spent the last two years begging to get...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved