Political scientist Robert Axelrod and biologist W.D. Hamilton studied altruism using the Prisoner’s Dilemma—a game where two players can choose to cooperate or betray each other.
Betrayal offers a tempting payoff, but if both betray, both lose.
This dilemma led to the discovery of the “Tit for Tat” strategy: start by cooperating, then mirror your partner’s last move. If they betray, you retaliate once, then return to cooperation.
Tit for Tat balances vengeance with forgiveness and thrives only in environments where others are also inclined to cooperate.
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