Daftpanzer
canonically ambiguous
I'm proposing that we're not genetically wired to pursue violence in the same way that we pursue food, water, friendship, sex and fun. But we can train ourselves that violence is fun and rewarding.
"Man has killed man from the beginning of time, and each new frontier has brought new ways and new places to die. Why should the future be different?"I doubt tribals had any concept of a global economy. That is precisely the reason why I think murder is not a necessity for humanity, we evolve.
Yes, so implicitly wishing for global collapse due to one's dislike of or ambivalence toward the current system, as Daft was maybe ironically or not doing, maybe for comedy or not, is in poor taste, much like making a Holocaust joke—at best—then, no?The point here is the global collapse of order which will quickly both reduce our population in savage ways and mess up the statistics that you posted. If you somehow died in that "event" I don't think a 50% chance of death or 1% chance of death that actually got you will make much of a difference.
It was not my supposition that you did. Anyway, what I meant by that is that it's in Humanity's nature to often be violent and sometimes awful. Nothing will change that without changing what it means to be Human, and even when that's possible, to give it up entirely would in my opinion make us less than we are now. It's not to excuse a lot of what we've done, because those many, many actions were often wrong and sometimes evil, but the capability of committing them isn't: it's who we are.Agree with the trend and no, I do not want the man or the system to burn.
I want to point out that analog and digital computing was overwhelmingly driven for its first several decades by the need to simulate nuclear explosions, and the miniaturization of this technology into modern integrated circuits was overwhelmingly driven by the desire for ever more sophisticated military systems, and the network on which commercial devices now communicate was initially designed explicitly to facilitate communications (between military-industrial complex entities) in the aftermath of a nuclear war. You can sit and judge the future potential of Humanity to be whatever you want, and I would agree that things can, should, and will get better.With billions of people now interconnected around the globe I think we're in for interesting times and we might just surprise ourselves at how 'human' we can be.
Babies are racists. It's genetic. You'll have to come up with more than your opinion to prove that Humans aren't hardwired to fight when it's literally been our species' favorite pastime for a hundred thousand years. Our faces evolved in a way that could take a punch. Our fists evolved in a way that better enabled us to punch. Our arms evolved to throw spears, and probably not just at food. I'm sure we'll discover all sorts of interesting things about the role of violence in our heritage and how integral a part it is of what makes us Human. I don't think denying it is terribly productive; quite the opposite in fact, it's sort of self-delusion to do so.I'm proposing that we're not genetically wired to pursue violence in the same way that we pursue food, water, friendship, sex and fun. But we can train ourselves that violence is fun and rewarding.
Love that game. I believe in my first game where I didn't know the story I ruined the planed ecologically and had to fight with swarms of locusts and the remaining survivors over last remaining spits of land. Its a good thing I could reload, isn't it?"Man has killed man from the beginning of time, and each new frontier has brought new ways and new places to die. Why should the future be different?"
—Col. Corazon Santiago "Planet: A Survivalist's Guide"
Yes, in the discussion you pointed out that there's nothing wrong or evil about murder that murder alone can cause 50% of human deaths. I don't think it is true now (you've demonstrated that with statistics) nor that it should be true in our future history.More to the point, no, where you came in on this "discussion" was Daft being churlish and I chiding him for it.
Holocaust is not a joke, my country is amongst the few that know it very well. I think in this case you misunderstand what people fear, what people expect and what people want i. I'm sure a lot of smart people saw the beginning of the Second World War before it happened, but its not what they wished for.Yes, so implicitly wishing for global collapse due to one's dislike of or ambivalence toward the current system, as Daft was maybe ironically or not doing, maybe for comedy or not, is in poor taste, much like making a Holocaust joke—at best—then, no?
I absolutely agree. But it is also in human nature to be noble and charitable (to the point of self-sacrifice). It is the old Indian story about the wolf you feed.It was not my supposition that you did. Anyway, what I meant by that is that it's in Humanity's nature to often be violent and sometimes awful.
Referring to what I just said above that we are what we make ourselves (we have the capacity to be both cruel and merciful, the rest is up to circumstances and our will) there's also an apparent need for the species to change and evolve before we drown ourselves with consequences of technology that already surpasses our ability to control it.Nothing will change that without changing what it means to be Human, and even when that's possible, to give it up entirely would in my opinion make us less than we are now. It's not to excuse a lot of what we've done, because those many, many actions were often wrong and sometimes evil, but the capability of committing them isn't: it's who we are.
We aren't peace-loving and we aren't rational and we often aren't self-interested. Which is again going back to a particular set of beliefs espoused by...
Nothing will change that without changing what it means to be Human, and even when that's possible, to give it up entirely would in my opinion make us less than we are now. It's not to excuse a lot of what we've done, because those many, many actions were often wrong and sometimes evil, but the capability of committing them isn't: it's who we are.
It's contextual.My main issue and I think my main point of contention with your view is the phrase that murder is normal and not "evil" or "wrong", but I guess that debate is for another time...
Rage and anger aren't the only causes for murder...Oh Symphony, you are such a delight to engage with!
Just to clarify my earlier contribution to this discussion:
The emotion of rage/anger - comes from feeling blocked, threatened, unappreciated does it not? I'd call it a response, rather than an innate drive that we're just barely containing in our day-to-day interactions.
Organised violence wars etc - I'd call it cultural phenomenon, meme, belief system, which can play into the above, but again is not innate to the human condition.
All I can say is I personally don't feel the need to cause physical harm to other people. Its not an obstacle to me feeling fulfilled in life.
There's a book about that too. It should be noted that the book describes what the Wikipedia entry calls "an innate resistance to killing" as a very recent phenomenon (in Human history). You can go read bits of it on Google Books.In fact it just comes to show how great modern society is - we managed to make humans who don't want to kill even if it made their lives better. It didn't use to be like that...
Innate resistance to killing seems strange. I think that living in the old ages with its various daily hardships mostly inoculated people against feelings of guilt and stress in regards to violence against humans. Nowadays we see a lot more of combat stress and PTSD because daily life for most people is not exactly a meat grinder unless you live in Bodymore, Murdaland. Horse tribes were in particular pretty meh about killing because you were seeing it as a normal everyday thing since you were a kid.
Nowadays we see a lot more of combat stress and PTSD
EDIT: Also true that PTSD before was probably not more recognized but I think its severity was different, combat stress was always there I suppose, facing hand-to-hand with an elephant would unnerve almost everyone.
PTSD isn't even combat specific. It is a natural human problem caused by traumatic stress. It has existed for the entirety of human existence. A guy with PTSD from Vietnam is no different than a guy with PTSD from a Punic War or a woman after a rape.
I think the efforts to generalize any sort of attitude or behavior across humanity are as doomed to failure as inflexible ideologies are.![]()