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Natural born warriors |
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By Khaled Diab Does scientific evidence that war is hardwired into human society mean
that we are doomed to live in perpetual conflict? |
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January
2009 If war is
a product of human culture, then there endures the possibility – no matter
how remote it may seem at present – that we will, one day, learn to eradicate
that scourge on our societies through cultural change and evolution. But what
if it turns out that our species has a natural propensity to wage war and
that warfare has had a profound influence on how humanity has evolved?
According to an emerging theory, “not only is war as ancient as human kind…
but it has played an integral role in our evolution”, New Scientist reported
last week. Experts
from numerous disciplines – anthropologists, archaeologists, primatologists,
psychologists and political scientists – now seem to agree that warfare has
affected our evolution and is, hence, hard-wired into our societies and
behaviour. And it does not take a massive leap of logic to understand where
they are coming from. One can
quite easily imagine that competition over food and other scarce resources
led our ancestors to take up arms against rival groups. This rivalry
triggered an evolutionary cycle in which different groups would develop more
elaborate ways of attacking their rivals and defending themselves against
attack. This has
taken us from the informal, small-scale group violence of our forebears –
which was similar to that of related species, such as chimps – using simple
stone weapons or spears, to the highly organised mobilisation of armies
counting in the millions, armed with high-tech weaponry. Well,
it’s not all bad news. Despite its huge cost to society, war can have some
benefits, but whether these can ever outweigh the costs, especially of modern
warfare, is doubtful. Just as military research sometimes creates useful
spin-offs for society, evidence suggests that our evolution into effective
warriors has helped equip us with out highly evolved ability to co-operate
within society and work together towards common goals. If warfare,
as this theory suggests, is a deeply ingrained aspect of human culture, does
that mean we are doomed to live in perpetual conflict? The
notion that war is a natural human tendency makes belief in its inevitability
tempting, which can give warmongers an additional justification when beating
the drums of conflict and it can take some of the wind out of opposition to
war. But this
would be an extremely flawed way of looking at this theory. Even if we are
natural born warriors, we are also born pacifists and peacemakers. The
species that cursed us with Adolf Hitler also blessed us with Mahatma Gandhi.
In fact, the vast majority of humans and societies spend more time in peace
than at war. In
addition, a deeper understanding of what drives us to violence can help us
develop the mechanisms to cope with it and dispel its causes. For instance,
the type of warfare we are “naturally” predisposed to is more akin to gang
wars which bear little resemblance to contemporary warfare. As Samuel
Bowles, an economist at the Santa Fe Institute in Given the
massive costs in terms of both human lives and resources of modern warfare,
we can only expect – and hope – that the “alternative benefits of peace” will
increasingly get the upper hand. There are a number of promising examples of
societies that have learnt that lesson, albeit the hard way. Deeply
ingrained as the war instinct is, we can evolve out of it, like we once evolved
into it. Perceptions of group identity – the fearful “us” versus “them”
dichotomy – play a major role, and are manipulated, in the march to war. If
we can somehow elevate appreciation of our common humanity – and the common
good – above the narrow self-interests of individual societies, then we have
a hope of reining in the massive destructiveness of modern conflict. We have
taken tentative steps along these lines, such as through the acknowledgement
of our common humanity in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. Now we need the necessary cultural shift and
robust international legal order to make these principles a reality. This
column appeared in The Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free section
on 22 November 2008. Read the related
discussion. ăCopyright 2009 – Khaled Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content
on this website is the copyright of Khaled Diab. |