New Research Explains How the Ability to Collaborate Became Widespread in Humans

Study authors are the first to provide a plausible theory of how and when early man developed the ability to collaborate

Written byMonash University
| 2 min read
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Shared intentions are part of our everyday life. They range from the banal, such as “we intend to go out to dinner tonight”, to those with more far-reaching consequences like “we intend to form an alliance to defeat our common enemy”.

Monash Business School’s Dr Simon Angus and co-author Dr Jonathan Newton (University of Sydney) are the first to provide a plausible theory of how and when early man developed the ability to collaborate.

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