Herbert Gintis

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Herbert Gintis
Born February 11, 1940
Philadelphia, PA
Residence United States
Nationality American
Fields Economics
Institutions Santa Fe Institute and Central European University
Known for Altruism, Cooperation, Epistemic game theory, Cooperation, Gene-culture coevolution, Contested exchange, Behavioral game theory, Strong reciprocity, Human capital, Unification of the Behavioral sciences

Herbert Gintis (born 1940) is an American behavioral scientist, educator, and author. He is notable for his foundational views on Altruism, Cooperation, Epistemic Game Theory, Gene-culture Coevolution, Efficiency wages, Strong Reciprocity, and Human capital theory. Gintis has also written extensively on behavioral, evolutionary, and epistemic game theory.

Gintis received his B.A. in Mathematics from University of Pennsylvania in 1961. The following year, he received an M.A. in Mathematics from Harvard University. In 1969, he received a Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard after acceptance of his dissertation, Alienation and power: towards a radical welfare economics.

He works extensively with economist Samuel Bowles. Both Gintis and Bowles were asked by Martin Luther King Jr. to write papers for the 1968 Poor People's March. Gintis and others were also 1968 co-founders of Union for Radical Political Economics.[1] [2]

Gintis is currently Professor at Central European University and External Professor at Santa Fe Institute

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[edit] Author

Gintis is an editor of the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization. He is the author of numerous scholarly articles and books, some of which include:

Contextual Political Analysis.

and Brain Sciences 28: 795—855.

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