Unravelling into war: trust and social preferences in Hobbes's state of nature

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Abstract

According to Hobbes, individuals care about their relative standing in a way that shapes their social interactions. To model this aspect of Hobbesian psychology, this paper supposes that agents have social preferences, that is, preferences about their comparative resource holdings. Introducing uncertainty regarding the social preferences of others unleashes a process of trust-unravelling, ultimately leading to Hobbes's 'state of war'. This Trust-unravelling Model incorporates important features of Hobbes's argument that past models ignore.

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Schaefer, A., & Sohn, J. Y. (2022). Unravelling into war: trust and social preferences in Hobbes’s state of nature. Economics and Philosophy, 38(2), 171–205. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0266267121000079

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