“…Over the millennia, those individuals who better attracted goodwill and avoided the indifference, censure and wrath of potential aid-givers would have more frequently survived and reproduced. This information threat theory of shame therefore posits that shame is an adaptation that evolved to defend against information-triggered devaluation (Landers, Sznycer & Al Shawaf, 2022; Sznycer, 2010; Sznycer et al, 2016; Sznycer, Sell, & Lieberman, 2021; Sznycer, Cosmides, & Tooby, 2017; Robertson et al, 2018; see also Gilbert, 1997; Fessler, 1999; Weisfeld & Dillon, 2012; Baumeister & Tice, 1990; Schlenker & Leary, 1982). According to this account, the shame system is an adaptation designed to coordinate psychology, physiology and behaviour to: (a) inhibit actions likely to yield more costs from social devaluation than the benefits said actions would yield; (b) limit the spread of potentially discrediting information about the self; (c) minimise the degree and scope of any social devaluation that does occur; and, if devaluation occurs, (d) motivate actions geared toward mitigating its costs.…”