From TedTalks:
Empathy, cooperation, fairness and reciprocity — caring about the well-being of others seems like a very human trait. But Frans de Waal shares some surprising videos of behavioral tests, on primates and other mammals, that show how many of these moral traits all of us share.
Related Situationist posts:
- The Situation of Social Justice
- Choice and Inequality
- Psychology of Inequality
- A Discussion about (In)Equality
- The Situational Effects of (In)Equality
- The Inherited Situation of Racial Inequality
- Barbara Ehrenreich on the Sources of and Problems with Dispositionism,
- The Motivated Situation of Inequality and Discrimination
- The Unequal Situation of Seperation
- Examining Why Estimated “Costs” of Racial Inequality Vary by Race,
- The Situational Consequences of Poverty on Brains
- The Interior Situational Reaction to Inequality
- A System-Justification Primer
- Rationalize or Rebel?
- Accept or Rebel?
- Barbara Ehrenreich on the Sources of and Problems with Dispositionism,
- The Motivated Situation of Inequality and Discrimination,
- John Jost on System Justification Theory,
- John Jost’s “System Justification and the Law” – Video
- Independence Day: Celebrating Courage to Challenge the Situation
- Cheering for the Underdog
- Patriots Lose: Justice Restored!
- Psychology of Inequality
- Self-Fulfilling Doomsday Prophecies
- The Cause of Rioting? That’s Easy: Rioters!
- If It’s Evitable, I Don’t Like It!
- Aaron Kay, “The Psychological Power of the Status Quo, and
- System Justification Theory and Law.