human nature and war Flashcards
three different propositions we will look at in greater detail:
o (1). The ethnological (or nature) argument that human nature causes war.
o (2). The constructivist (or nurture) argument that socialization causes war.
o (3). The systemic (or Waltzian) argument that human nature does not matter.
- Definition of War:
Armed contest between two independent political units (not intra-state), by means of organized military force, usually fought for political ends.
(I). Ethology:
- Ethology is the study of human and animal behavior.
o Much of their work focuses evolutionary biology and its adaptive purposes, rather than learned behavior.
o Ethologists therefore tend to emphasize the genetic origins of behavior and downplay the role of socialization.
- The underlying logic of ethology is that
human behavior, (the behavior of everyone in this room), is the result of millions of years of successful evolution.
* Outlined in Charles Darwin’s (1859 Origin of Species), you have a process of natural selection, in which there is survival for the fittest.
- For ethology, the human brain is
hardwired, and therefore human thought has predispositions. People have instincts. These fundamental drives: hunger, sex, fear, aggression, territoriality.
One human instinctual behavior that has received a significant amount of evidence is
the effects of ingroupism & outgroupism.
- The implication for constructing identities is that
no in-group can survive without an outgroup.
- Extrapolating this interstate relations, we can merge ingroupism/outgroupism with:
o The security dilemma,
In which one exaggerates the extent to which outgroups are preparing hostilities against the ingroup.
o The fundamental attribution error,
In which outgroups are attributed with hostile policies by choice and in-groups with defensive policies by necessity.
* This seems like an adaptive:
o It predisposed early human to be suspicious of nature and its many dangers:
Wild cats, bears, and perhaps other hostile simians.
o But makes inter-state negotiation very difficult.
(II). Constructivism:
- Constructivism examines the role of how realities are constructed and reproduced through the transmission of ideas.
- There is an historical explanation and it is that somehow we came to share these ideas and the Americans to the South of us did not.
o To understand human behavior, we therefore have to look at the history of ideas
know milgram study:
- The Study
o These subjects were told, but an authoritative looking scientist, that the experiment was the effects of punishment on learning.
o The learning task consisted of associating nonsense syllables.
o The subject was put in the role of a teacher and was instructed to punish the student’s mistakes with electric shocks.
o The strength of the shocks was graduated from 15 volts, increasing in 15-volt intervals to 300 volts, and a final voltage labelled XXX.
o The student was strapped in a chair with electrodes hooked up to the voltage device.
o The teacher was instructed to punish the student with increasingly severe shocks.
o The teacher was accompanied by the research scientists who instructed the teacher when to inflict the shocks.
o The student was actually an actor, and simulated the pain suffered every-time a shock was administered, pleading at times and hitting the walls when the heavier shocks were administered.
o While 35% of the subjects refused to administer shocks beyond a certain point, fully 65% of subjects applied the XXX shock treatment. - Milgram sought to demonstrate that the influence of authority figures is greater than the inhibition not to harm innocent human beings.
- To control for the possibility that the subjects were motivated by conformity as different from obedience to an authority figure, Milgram added two scientist accomplices who recommended lower charges in the first control group, and higher voltages in the second control group.
o The subject tended to conform with these suggestions, and therefore there is an independent effect from group conformity that Milgram could control for.
implication of Milgram study
o Subjects could be socialized, through the trusted proxy of an authoritative scientist, to counter-act their instincts.
o This is a good demonstration that human instincts are shaped by powerful social and learning influences.
Margaret Mead: war is
learned
- A favorite case of Mead was the crucial case of the
Eskimo: the Eskimo are both isolated from modern civilization and are remarkably peaceful.
o Problem: Mead does not try and cannot explain the variance: some societies like the Pueblo Aboriginals seldom fought, whereas the Sioux fought wars frequently.
- There are 5 reasons why the Inu people should not be warlike:
o (1). No need for territory;
o (2). Limited need for property;
o (3). No need for slaves;
o (4). Sparsity of population makes war difficult;
o (5). Poverty striken populations.
- Charles Tilly, in his study of how war was the most important process in the origin of European states, concluded that militaries had two roles:
o (1). The protection of the country from external threats and
o (2). Ensuring domestic stability and taxation.