Abstract

The paper posits that kin sociality and eusociality are derived from the handicap-care principles based on the need-based care to the handicappers from the caregivers for the self-interest of the caregivers. In this paper, handicap is defined as the difficulty to survive and reproduce independently. Kin sociality is derived from the childhood handicap-care principle where the children are the handicapped children who receive the care from the kin caregivers in the inclusive kin group to survive. The caregiver gives care for its self-interest to reproduce its gene. The individual’s gene of kin sociality contains the handicapped childhood and the caregiving adulthood. Eusociality is derived from the adulthood handicap-care principle where responsible adults are the handicapped adults who give care and receive care at the same time in the interdependent eusocial group to survive and reproduce its gene. Queen bees reproduce, but must receive care from worker bees that work but must rely on queen bees to reproduce. A caregiver gives care for its self-interest to survive and reproduce its gene. The individual’s gene of eusociality contains the handicapped childhood-adulthood and the caregiving adulthood. The chronological sequence of the sociality evolution is individual sociality without handicap, kin sociality with handicapped childhood, and eusociality with handicapped adulthood. Eusociality in humans is derived from bipedalism and the mixed habitat. The chronological sequence of the eusocial human evolution is 1) the eusocial early hominins with bipedalism and the mixed habitat, 2) the eusocial early Homo species with bipedalism, the larger brain, and the open habitat, 3) the eusocial late Homo species with bipedalism, the largest brain, and the unstable habitat, and 4) extended eusocial Homo sapiens with bipedalism, the shrinking brain, omnipresent imagination, and the harsh habitat. The omnipresence of imagination in human culture converts eusociality into extended eusociality with both perception and omnipresent imagination.

Highlights

  • Eusociality [1] is the highest level of organization of animal sociality in certain insects, crustaceans, and mammals

  • Some social groups with high genetic relatedness are not eusocial, so it is necessary to explain eusociality by group fitness for group selection based on the behaviors good for group [2] [5] [6]

  • The chronological sequence of the sociality evolution is individual sociality based on individual fitness without handicap, kin sociality based on inclusive fitness with handicapped childhood, and eusociality based on interdependent fitness with handicapped adulthood

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Summary

Introduction

Eusociality [1] is the highest level of organization of animal sociality in certain insects, crustaceans, and mammals. Kin selection can explain eusociality in the bees with high genetic relatedness. Some social groups with high genetic relatedness are not eusocial, so it is necessary to explain eusociality by group fitness for group selection based on the behaviors good for group [2] [5] [6]. This paper posits that kin sociality and eusociality are derived from the handicap-care principles based on the instinctive need-based care to the handicappers from the caregivers for the self-interest of the caregivers. The childhood handicap solicits the care from kin adult caregivers. The individual’s gene of kin sociality contains the handicapped childhood and the caregiving adulthood. The handicap is the adulthood handicap where responsible adults are handicappers unable to survive and reproduce independently.

The Handicap-Care Principle
The Sociality Evolution
The Human Eusocial Evolution
Findings
Summary
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