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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Aug 9, 2025

Assessment of Social Cognition in Non-human Primates Using a Network of Computerized Automated Learning Device ALDM Test Systems
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Testing the human superorganism approach to morality.

Robert Aunger1, Katie Greenland1

  • 1Department of Infectious Disease, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, England.

Journal of Behavioral Addictions
|February 16, 2023
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Human Superorganism Theory (HSoT) redefines the moral domain, proposing morality evolved to suppress cheaters in large societies. This study confirms HSoT, showing people moralize superorganism functions beyond harm and fairness.

Keywords:
moral domainmoralitysuperorganismweb experiment

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Area of Science:

  • Moral psychology
  • Evolutionary psychology
  • Social cognition

Background:

  • Existing moral psychology theories lack consensus on the scope of moral concerns.
  • Human societies are unusually large, suggesting unique evolutionary pressures on morality.

Purpose of the Study:

  • Introduce and test Human Superorganism Theory (HSoT) as a novel framework for the moral domain.
  • Investigate if moral concerns extend beyond traditional harm and fairness to include superorganism functions.

Main Methods:

  • A large-scale web-based experiment involving approximately 80,000 participants.
  • Presentation of 33 scenarios designed to probe moral judgments related to HSoT-identified superorganism functions.

Main Results:

  • All 13 superorganism functions proposed by HSoT were significantly moralized by participants.
  • Violations of social customs or individual decisions outside these functions were not moralized.
  • Hypotheses derived from HSoT were empirically supported.

Conclusions:

  • HSoT provides a robust framework for understanding a broader moral domain.
  • Moral action primarily functions to suppress cheating within human superorganisms.
  • Findings have implications for psychology, legal theory, and understanding human sociality.