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Wilson,
Edward O. On Human Nature [abstract 360
words]
Are
human beings innately aggressive? From the point of
view of sociobiologys founding father the answer
is, yes they are. Aggression, has been endemic to every
form of society, from hunter-gatherer bands to industrial
states. He distinguishes different forms. Among them
the defense and conquest of territory, group domination,
sexual aggression and disciplinary aggression used to
enforce the rules of society.
Most
kinds of aggressive behavior among members of the same
species are the result of crowding in the environment.
Animals use aggression as a technique for gaining control
over necessities, ordinarily food, shelter or mating
prerogatives.
It
is true that human aggressive behavior, especially in
its more dangerous forms of military action and criminal
assault, is learned. But the learning is prepared for.
Humans are strongly predisposed to slide into deep,
irrational hostility.
Human
aggression cannot be explained as either a human flaw
or a bestial instinct. Nor is it the symptom of upbringing
in a cruel environment. Our brains appear to be programmed
to the following extent: we are strongly predisposed
to divide people into us and them.
We tend to fear deeply the actions of strangers and
to resolve threats by aggression. These learning rules
are most likely to have evolved during the past hundreds
of thousands of years of human evolution and, thus,
to have conferred a biological advantage on those who
conformed to them.
The
learning rules of violent aggression are largely obsolete.
We are no longer hunter-gatherers who settle disputes
with spears, arrows, and stone axes. But to acknowledge
the obsolescence of the rules is not to banish them.
We can only work our way around them. We must consciously
undertake those difficult pathways in psychological
development that lead to mastery over and reduction
of the profound human tendency to learn violence
With
pacifism as a goal, scholars and political leaders will
find it useful to deepen studies in anthropology and
social psychology. To provide a more durable foundation
for peace, political and cultural ties are needed to
create cross-binding loyalties among people. We must
find ways to eliminate the distinctions in race, language,
nationhood, religion, ideology, and economic interest
that separate us.
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