Tag: War

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March 18, 2012

Good Guys Kill Better, or How to Outwit the Bad Beast of Our Nature

recent work in evolutionary psychology indicates the Golden Rule principles operate fairly in all cultures, most of the time, but not between cultures.

May 7, 2012

Pinker, Politics, and the Decline of Violence: Roundtable on “The Better Angels of Our Nature”

This year's meeting of the International Studies Association featured a panel organized exclusively around Steven Pinker's book. Steven Pinker's book, "The Better Angels of Our Nature," has been getting substantial media attention this year, and it makes what many see as a surprising and counterintuitive claim about the decline of violence in human evolutionary history. Now, the academics weigh in. This year's meeting of the International Studies Association featured a panel organized exclusively around Pinker's book.

March 27, 2012

Of Chimps and Men: War In Evolutionary Perspective

Evolutionary theory as a lens with which to investigate the origins and psychological mechanisms of war. Partly stemming from misapplication of metaphors such as "survival of the fittest" and the "struggle for survival," it was assumed that Darwinian processes could only produce selfish individuals that care not for the welfare of others. In the case of coalitional violence, early ethologists argued that chimpanzees and humans naturally strive to dominate each other and that aggression is the inevitable consequence of competitive social environments.

August 20, 2012

The Rats of War: Konrad Lorenz and the Anthropic Shift

Rats and humans tribal instincts.

January 13, 2013

Is War Creative?

Warfare has transformed us from living in villages to living in huge states, building cities and civilizations, and ultimately making our lives more peaceful.

January 31, 2013

What Our Primate Relatives Say About War

With a clearer picture of where we came from, we may find a better understanding of who we are and where we are going.