Nautilus

Is Tribalism a Natural Malfunction?

From an office at Carnegie Mellon, my colleague John Miller and I had evolved a computer program with a taste for genocide.

This was certainly not our intent. We were not scholars of race, or war. We were interested in the emergence of primitive cooperation. So we built machines that lived in an imaginary society, and made them play a game with each other—one known to engender complex social behavior just as surely as a mushy banana makes fruit flies.

The game is called Prisoner’s Dilemma. It takes many guises, but it is at heart a story about two individuals that can choose to cooperate or to cheat. If they both cheat, they both suffer. If they both cooperate, they both prosper. But if one tries to cooperate while the other cheats, the cheater prospers even more.

The game has a generality that appeals to a political philosopher, but a rigorous specificity that makes it possible to guide computer simulations. As a tool for the mathematical study of human behavior, it is the equivalent of Galileo’s inclined plane, or Gregor Mendel’s pea plants. Do you join the strike, or sneak across the picket line? Rein in production to keep prices

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Nautilus

Nautilus9 min read
When Do We Have Free Choice?
After the United States Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, eliminating the constitutional right to an abortion, women around the country felt their options constrict. Jana, a young aspiring lawyer interviewed by The Guardian in 2023, reluc
Nautilus2 min read
Life Will Find a Way
Frost-resistant lichens flourish in the Arctic tundra; bacteria thrive around hydrothermal vents deep in the ocean; humans rebuild a town after a devastating tsunami. Life, as they say, finds a way.  A new exhibition highlighting this driving force o
Nautilus3 min read
Whale Sharks on Collision Course
In the blue expanse of the world’s tropical waters, whale sharks glide like gentle giants. Stretching upward of 60 feet in length, these endangered creatures are the largest fish in the ocean. Known for their distinctive spotted skin, truncated snout

Related Books & Audiobooks