The Molecule of More

(Jacob Rumans) #1
DOMINATION

feelings of guilt, which is an H&N emotion. It is capable of inspiring
honorable effort, but  also  deceit and  even violence in  pursuit of the 
things it wants.
Dopamine pursues more, not morality; to dopamine, force and fraud
are nothing more than tools.
Israeli researchers designed an experiment to help them better
understand why people cheat. They set up a pair of games that would
pit  one  player against another. The  first  was  a  guessing game in  which 
players competed to see who could guess what images were going to
appear on a computer screen. In this game it was impossible to cheat.
The second game was  different: the  first  player rolled a  pair  of dice, 
and announced the results to the second player. The higher the roll,
the  more money the  first  player got,  and  the  less  her  opponent got.  In 
this game cheating was not only possible, it was easy. The second player
couldn’t see  the  actual dice, so  the  first  player could report anything she 
liked. The  winner and  the  loser of the  first  game took turns rolling the 
dice and announcing the result.
Because of the way dice are marked, if everyone was honest, the
average score should have been about seven. The  losers of the  first  game
reported an average roll of a little over six during the second game, which
was  consistent with random chance. The  winners of the  first  game, on 
the other hand, reported a second-game average of almost nine. Statis-
tical analysis revealed that it was extremely unlikely that number could
have come about by chance. There was a greater than 99 percent likeli-
hood that the  first-game winners cheated on the second game.
For the next phase of the experiment, the researchers changed
things. Instead  of  a  competition, the  first  game was  changed to  a 
lottery—and the  new arrangement yielded a  very different outcome. 
The players who won the lottery didn’t cheat at all on the second game.
In fact, they appear to have underreported their scores, resulting in
their opponents sharing the spoils of victory.
The scientists weren’t sure how to explain this result. They thought
that maybe people who won competitions, as opposed to winning by
pure luck, developed a sense of entitlement that allowed them to justify
subsequent cheating. But by thinking about the role dopamine plays

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