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Altruism is a primary impulse, not a discipline
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 March 2003
Abstract
Intertemporal bargaining theory based on the hyperbolic discounting of expected rewards accounts for how choosing in categories increases self-control, without postulating, as Rachlin does, the additional rewardingness of patterns per se. However, altruism does not seem to be based on self-control, but on the primary rewardingness of vicarious experience. We describe a mechanism that integrates vicarious experience with other goods of limited availability.
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- © 2002 Cambridge University Press
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