Abstract

There is growing evidence that human ideology as well as social and political attitudes also have a genetic basis. In case of some genetic predisposition of political attitude, an association with fertility would be a hint of potential selection on political ideology. We therefore investigated on the basis of men and women that have completed, respectively, almost completed reproduction, of three different data sets (the World Value Survey 1981–2014 covering a wide range of countries and developmental levels, n = 152,380, the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe of 2005, n = 65,912, and the General Social Survey of the United States 1972–2014, n ∼ 6200) whether political attitude is associated with number of children. Overall, in the world wide survey, both extreme political attitudes, albeit more pronounced for right/conservative than for left/liberal attitude, are associated with higher average offspring number compared to intermediate attitudes. If countries are analyzed separately, however, the picture is inconsistent, and in most countries, the association is non-significant. In the European and the US-survey, only the political right is associated with above average number of children. The time series of US data from 1972 to 2014 shows that at least in the US-sample, this pattern emerged during the 1990s: in the 1970s and 1980s, also in the US-sample both political extremes had a reproductive advantage, which vanished for left wing individuals during the 1990s. From an evolutionary perspective, we are not able to draw final conclusions as the association between political attitude and reproduction varies across countries and time. Nonetheless, the overall pattern suggests that in human evolutionary history, both left and right political attitudes may have conveyed fitness benefits so that both attitudes have been kept in the population.

Highlights

  • There is growing evidence that human ideology, as well as social and political attitudes have a substantial genetic basis (Hatemi and McDermott, 2012, 2016)

  • In the World Value Survey (WVS), overall, we find a u-shaped association between political attitude and number of children: both clearly left and clearly right positioned individuals have, on average, a higher number of children than individuals with an intermediate political attitude

  • Estimates and Overall, in the worldwide sample (WVS), we find a reproductive advantage for the more extreme political positions, both “right” and “left.” In addition, overall right attitude is associated with higher average number of children than overall left attitude

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Summary

Introduction

There is growing evidence that human ideology, as well as social and political attitudes have a substantial genetic basis (Hatemi and McDermott, 2012, 2016). In case political attitude has a genetic basis, this basis should either be a product of selection, a by-product of selection for another trait, or both. Such presumptions, challenge the claims that individual differences of attitudes are solely socially determined and that humans have been able to “overcome” evolution. The wide use of genetic as well as “big” data, has led to novel insights that profoundly challenge the notion that human evolution has come to an end (Stearns et al, 2010; Field et al, 2016)

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