#120 Michael Bang Petersen: Evolution, Emotions, Groups, and Politics
Dr. Michael Bang Petersen is Professor of Political Science at Aarhus University, in Denmark. He also directs The Politics and Evolution Lab (PoNE Lab) there. He investigates how the adaptive challenges of human evolutionary history shape the way modern citizens think about mass politics.
In this episode, we talk about evolutionary political psychology. We discuss what is to be understood as political behavior; the emotions, heuristics and biases that are more relevant to understand people’s political behavior (and also in other animals); the deservingness heuristic; the biological bases of our progress from small-scale hunter-gatherer societies to modern states, and the expansion of group identities; the cues that lead people to support the welfare system more easily; intentionality; how to tackle issues of political polarization; and also the benefits that politicians can take from learning more about evolutionary psychology, and how human psychology generally works.
Time Links:
What is evolutionary political psychology?
What is political behavior?
Emotions in politics
Heuristics and biases
The deservingness heuristic
How to we go from small-scale groups to modern societies?
The expansion of group identities
Danes, Americans, and the welfare system
How to promote support for the welfare state
The importance of intentionality
Men with greater upper-body strength are less in favor of economic redistribution
People and their relationship with their political parties
How societies might have expanded
Can people with different group identities cooperate?
Political animals that do not understand much about political systems
Trying to avoid political polarization
How to educate better politicians
Follow Dr. Bang Petersen’s work!
Follow Dr. Bang Petersen’s work:
Faculty page: https://tinyurl.com/y83euhwj
The Politics and Evolution Lab (PoNE Lab): https://tinyurl.com/y7xwfuw7
Articles on Researchgate: https://tinyurl.com/ycp5oxj6