Abstract
Controlled fire use by early humans could have facilitated the evolution of human cooperation. Individuals with regular access to the benefits of domestic fire would have been at an advantage over those with limited or no access. However, a campfire would have been relatively costly for an individual to maintain and open to free riders. By cooperating, individuals could have reduced maintenance costs, minimized free riding and lessened the risk of being without fire. Cooperators were more likely to survive and reproduce than uncooperative individuals because the former would have been better able to maximize a fire’s returns and enjoy regular access to its benefits. This is how the emergence of controlled fire use in Pleistocene human populations could have facilitated the evolution of cooperation.
This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution.
Notes
Interestingly, fire use may be the earliest human behaviour that involved a public good in a strict sense. Dubreuil (2010) has argued that cooperative breeding and hunting by Middle Pleistocene humans around 500 kya is indicative of increased cognitive control in this respect. While recognizing the significance of cooperative breeding, Vaesen (2011) counters that we have no evidence for this behaviour, and that cooperative hunting does not necessarily involve human kinds of cooperation. However, cooperative hunting in non-human animals does not involve transporting, cooking and sharing the food (Stiner et al. 2009).
References
Alperson-Afil N, Goren-Inbar N (2010) The Acheulian site of Gesher Benot Ya’aqov volume II: ancient flames and controlled use of fire. Springer, Dordrecht
Barkley R (2001) The executive functions and self-regulation: an evolutionary neuropsychological perspective. Neuropsych Rev 11:1–29
Brinck I, Gärdenfors P (2003) Co-operation and communication in apes and humans. Mind Lang 18:484–501
Burton F (2009) Fire: the spark that ignited human evolution. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque
Clark J, Harris J (1985) Fire and its role in early hominid lifeways. Afric Arch Rev 3:3–27
De Silva H, Hauert C, Traulsen A, Sigmund K (2010) Freedom, enforcement, and the social dilemma of strong altruism. J Evol Econ 20:203–217
Dubreuil B (2010) Paleolithic public goods games: why human culture and cooperation did not evolve in one step. Biol Phil 25:53–73
Elton S (2008) The environmental context of human evolutionary history in Eurasia and Africa. J Anat 212:377–393
Fonseca-Azevedo K, Herculano-Houzel S (2012) Metabolic constraint imposes tradeoff between body size and number of brain neurons in human evolution. Pro Nat Acad Sci 109:18571–18576
Gamble C, Gowlett J, Dunbar R (2011) The social brain and the shape of the Palaeolithic. Camb Arch J 21:115–135
Gilligan I (2010) The prehistoric development of clothing: archaeological implications of a thermal model. J Arch Method Theory 17:15–80
Goudsblom J (1992) The civilizing process and the domestication of fire. J World Hist 3:1–12
Gowlett J (2006) The early settlement of northern Europe: fire history in the context of climate change and the social brain. Hum Palaeo and Prehist. C. R. Palevol 5:299–310
Gowlett J (2010) Firing up the social brain. In: Dunbar R, Gamble C, Gowlett J (eds) Social brain, distributed mind (Proceedings of the British Academy: 158). Oxford University Press, Oxford
Gowlett J, Wrangham R (2013) Earliest fire in Africa: towards the convergence of archaeological evidence and the cooking hypothesis. Azania: Arch Res in Africa 48:5–30
Grove M, Pearce E, Dunbar R (2012) Fission-fusion and the evolution of hominin social systems. J Hum Evol 62:191–200
Hauert C, Traulsen A, De Silva H, Nowak M, Sigmund K (2008) Public goods with punishment and abstaining in finite and infinite populations. Biol Theo 3:114–122
Hawkes K (1993) Why hunter-gatherers work: an ancient version of the problem of public goods. Curr Anthropol 34:341–361
Henry D (ed) (2003) Neanderthals in the Levant: behavioural organization and the beginnings of modern humanity. Continuum, London
Hirata S (2009) Chimpanzee social intelligence: selfishness, altruism, and the mother-infant bond. Primates 50:3–11
Holloway R, Broadfield D, Yuan M (2004) The human fossil record: brain endocasts–the paleoneurological evidence, Volume 3. Wiley, New Jersey
Hrdy S (2009) Mothers and others: the evolutionary origins of mutual understanding. Harvard Univesity Press, Cambridge MA
Jenike M (2001) Nutritional ecology: diet, physical activity and body size. In: Panter-Brick C, Layton H, Rowley-Conwy P (eds) Hunter-gatherers: an interdisciplinary perspective. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Kaiser I, Jensen K, Call J, Tomasello M (2012) Theft in an ultimatum game: chimpanzees and bonobos are insensitive to unfairness. Biol Lett. Published online 15th Aug, 1–6
Kurzban R, Houser D (2005) Experiments investigating cooperative types in humans: a complement to evolutionary theory and simulations. Pro Natl Acad Sci 102:1803–1807
Lalueza-Fox C, Rosas A, Estalrrich A, Gigli E, Campos P, Garcia-Tabernero A, Garcia-Vargas S, Sanchez-Quinto F, Ramirez O, Civit S, Bastir M, Huguet R, Santamaria D, Gilbert T, Willersiev E, de la Rasilla M (2011) Genetic evidence for patrilocal mating behavior among Neandertal groups. Pro Natl Acad Sci 108:250–253
Lycett J, Norton C (2010) A demographic model for Palaeolithic technological evolution: the case of East Asia and the Movius Line. Quater Inter 211:55–65
Marlowe F (2005) Hunter–Gatherers and human evolution. Evol Anthropol 14:54–67
Ofek H (2001) Second nature: economic origins of human evolution. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
Parfitt S, Ashton N, Lewis S, Abel R, Coope G, Field M, Gale R, Hoare P, Larkin N, Lewis M, Karloukovski V, Maher B, Peglar S, Preece R, Whittaker J, Stringer C (2010) Early Pleistocene human occupation at the edge of the boreal zone in northwest Europe. Nature (July) 466:229–233
Proctor D, Williamson A, de Waal F, Brosnan S (2013) Chimpanzees play the ultimatum game. Pro Natl Acad Sci Early Edition
Roebroeks W, Villa P (2011) On the earliest evidence for habitual use of fire in Europe. Pro Natl Acad Sci 108:5209–5214
Rolland N (2004) Was the emergence of home bases and domestic fire a punctuated event? A review of the Middle Pleistocene record in Eurasia. Asia Perspect 43:248–280
Ronen A (1998) Domestic fire as evidence for language. In: Takeru A, Aoki K, Bar-Yosef O (eds) Neanderthals and modern humans in Western Asia. Plenum Press, New York
Schoenemann T (2006) Evolution of the size and functional areas of the human brain. Annu Rev Anthropol 35:379–406
Shinada M, Yamagishi T (2007) Punishing free riders: direct and indirect promotion of cooperation. Evol Hum Behav 28:330–339
Stapert D, Johansen L (1999) Flint and pyrite: making fire in the stone age. Antiquity 73:765–777
Sterelny K (2007) Social intelligence, human intelligence and niche construction. Phil Trans Roy Soc B 362:719–730
Sterelny K (2012) Language, gesture, skill: the co-evolutionary functions of language. Phil Trans Roy Soc B 367:2141–2151
Stiner M, Barkai C, Gopher A (2009) Cooperative hunting and meat sharing 400–200 kya at Qesem Cave, Israel. Pro Nat Acad Sci 106:13207–13212
Tomasello M (2009) Origins of human communication. The MIT Press, Cambridge
Twomey T (2011) Keeping fire: the cognitive implications of controlled fire use by Middle Pleistocene humans. Unpublished PhD Thesis, http://repository.unimelb.edu.au/10187/11103
Twomey T (2013) The cognitive implications of controlled fire use by Middle Pleistocene humans. Camb Arch J 23:113–128
Vaesen K (2011) Cooperative feeding and breeding, and the evolution of cognitive control. Biol Phil 27:115–124
Van Mark Vugt, Van Lange P (2006) The altruism puzzle: psychological adaptations for prosocial behaviour. In: Schaller M, Simpson J, Kendrick D (eds) Evolution and social psychology. Psychology Press, New York
West SA, El Mouden C, Gardner A (2011) Sixteen common misconceptions about the evolution of cooperation in humans. Evol Hum Behav 32:231–262
Wrangham R (2009) Catching fire: how cooking made us human. Basic Books, New York
Wrangham R, Carmody R (2009) The energetic significance of cooking. J Hum Evol 57:379–391
Wrangham R, Carmody R (2010) Human adaptation to the control of fire. Evol Anthropol 19:187–199
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Twomey, T. How domesticating fire facilitated the evolution of human cooperation. Biol Philos 29, 89–99 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10539-013-9402-2
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10539-013-9402-2
Keywords
- Controlled fire use
- Cooperation
- Human evolution