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The Handicap Principle Is an Artifact

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journal contribution
posted on 2015-12-01, 00:00 authored by Simon M. Huttegger, Justin P. Bruner, Kevin ZollmanKevin Zollman

The handicap principle is one of the most influential ideas in evolutionary biology. It asserts that when there is conflict of interest in a signaling interaction signals must be costly in order to be reliable. While in evolutionary biology it is a common practice to distinguish between indexes and fakable signals, we argue this dichotomy is an artifact of existing popular signaling models. Once this distinction is abandoned, we show one cannot adequately understand signaling behavior by focusing solely on cost. Under our reframing, cost becomes one—and probably not the most important—of a collection of factors preventing deception.

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Copyright 2015 by the Philosophy of Science Association

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2015-12-01

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