MAN THE PEACE-LOVING HIPPIE?
The blood-bespattered, slaughter-gutted archives of human history from
the earliest Egyptians and Sumerian records to the most recent atrocities of
the Second World War accord with early universal cannibalism . . . and
with worldwide scalping, headhunting, body-mutilating and necrophilic
practices of mankind in proclaiming this common bloodlust differentiator,
this predaceous habit.79

Ouch! Given the above scenario laid out by Raymond Dart, one can
only blush at the legacy we've allegedly inherited. The trail seems to lead
from meat-eating to hunting, meander into cannibalism, and ultimately
dive inexorably into a whole slew of repulsive activities. But, as we keep
returning to after every misanthropic description, are views taken from a
Man the Hunter tableau supported by any scientific evidence?
When the 2006 American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS) meeting convened in St. Louis, Missouri, we participated in a
symposium bringing together researchers from diverse fields (primatology,
sociocultural anthropology, zoology, paleontology, psychiatry, psychology
,neurobiology, and genetics) to consider substantive evidence about violence
versus cooperation as hard-wired human behaviors. Along with other
scientists, we synthesized current research supporting the behavioral,
hormonal, and neuropsychiatric evolution of human cooperation.
To assess human behavior, researchers look at our primate roots where
sociality may have its origin in the general benefits of mutual cooperation,
strong mother-infant bonds, and the evolution of an extended juvenile
period in which developing young are dependent on other group members.
Naturally occurring opiates in the brain that have effects not unlike
the restfulness and lessening of unease attained through opium-based
narcotics (but without highs, withdrawals, or addiction) may be at the
core of innate cooperative social responses.80 These could finally explain
the evolution not only of cooperation among non-related humans and
non-human primates but also of true altruistic behavior. Going one step
further, Marc Hauser, professor of psychology, organismic and evolutionary
biology, and biological anthropology at Harvard, believes there is
evidence of a true moral toolkit in the human brain, a genetic mechanism
for acquisition of moral rules.81
Researchers have, in fact, identified a set of neuroendocrine mechanisms
that might lead to cooperative behavior among related and
non-related individuals. In experiments using magnetic resonance imaging,
or MRI (a technique that employs radio waves rather than radiation
to elucidate deep structure), mutual cooperation has been associated with
consistent activation in two areas of the brain that have been linked with
reward processing--specifically, the anteroventral striatum and the 
orbitofrontal
cortex. James Rilling, a neurobiologist at Emory University,
has proposed that activation of this neural network positively reinforces
cooperative social interactions.82 Even more compelling, the strength of
the neural response increases with the persistence of mutual cooperation
over successive trials; it is cumulative and self-reinforcing. Activation of
the brain's reward center may account for why we tend to feel good when
we cooperate. Both locations in the brain linked with reward processing
are rich in neurons that respond to dopamine, the neurotransmitter
known for its role in addictive behaviors. The dopamine system evaluates
rewards--both those that flow from the environment and those conjured
up within the brain. When the stimulus is positive, dopamine is released.
In experiments with rats in which electrodes are placed in the anteroventral
striatum, the animals continue to press a bar to stimulate the
electrodes, apparently receiving such pleasurable feedback that they will
starve to death rather than stop pressing the bar.83 As Dr. Gregory Berns,
an Emory University professor and one of the authors of a 2002 report in
the psychiatric journal Neuron puts it: "In some ways . . . we're wired to
cooperate with each other."84
Another physiological mechanism related to friendly affiliation and
nurturing is the neuroendocrine circuitry associated with mothering in
mammals. Orchestrating the broad suite of these bio-behavioral feedback
responses is the hormone oxytocin. Oxytocin has been related to
every type of animal bonding imaginable--parental, fraternal, sexual,
and even the capacity to soothe one's self. Researchers have suggested
that although oxytocin's primary role may have been in forging the
mother-infant bond, its ability to influence brain circuitry may have
been co-opted to serve other affiliative purposes that allowed the formation
of alliances and partnerships, thus facilitating the evolution of
cooperative behaviors.85
Results from both behavioral endocrinology and functional MRI
studies by University of Wisconsin psychologist Charles Snowdon and
colleagues on cotton-top tamarin monkeys reveal other hormonal
mechanisms critical to cooperation and affiliative behavior.86 Among
these small South American monkeys, males and other helpers, such as
older siblings, provide essential infant care. Elevated levels of the hormone
prolactin, usually associated with lactation, may be the impetus
behind maternal caregiving exhibited by males and siblings. Snowdon
has also found correlations of oxytocin and prolactin levels with
amounts of friendly social behavior between one adult and another. His
experiments indicate that high levels of affiliative hormones could result
in good-quality social interactions that suggest a reward system for positive
behavior.87
Many cooperative behaviors observed in primates can be explained by
individual behaviors that benefit several group members.88 Coordinated
behaviors such as resource or range defense, cooperative foraging and
food harvesting, alliance formation, and predator vigilance and defense
can be explained in terms of immediate benefits to both the individual
and other group members. Even if the rewards for these behaviors are
low level, we should expect cooperation to be common. Thus, many
types of social interactions may be best understood in terms of a nonzero-
sum game, with multiple winners. Low-risk coalitions in which all

participants make immediate gains are widespread among primates89
and may explain why nonhuman primates live in relatively stable, cohesive
social groups and solve the problems of everyday life in a
generally cooperative fashion. Charles Darwin had this idea long before
scientific studies of animal behavior, primatology, or cooperation when
he noted that natural selection would opt for "the feeling of pleasure
from society."90
Even though most nonhuman primates are highly social, investigations
into the evolution of primate sociality have tended to focus on
aggression and competition instead of cooperation. However, many results
from behavioral, hormonal, and brain imaging studies offer a new
perspective about primates and their proclivities toward cooperation, sociality,
and peace. For example, after 16 years of research on the behavior
and ecology of wild savanna baboons, well-known primatologists Joan
Silk, Susan Alberts, and Jeanne Altmann concluded that social integration
even enhances reproductive capabilities in female baboons: "Females who
had more social contact with other adult group members and were more
fully socially integrated into their groups were more likely than other
females to rear infants successfully."91 Frans de Waal, a chimpanzee
researcher at Emory University, contends in his book Primates and
Philosophers92 that chimp societies emphasize reconciliation and consolation
after conflict; his 40 years of primate behavior observations have
documented that concern for others is just natural conduct for our
closest primate relatives.
In a nutshell social animals appear to be wired to cooperate and to reduce
stress by seeking each other's company.93 If cooperation and
physical proximity among group-living animals are rewarding in a variety
of environmental and social circumstances and if physiological and neurological
feedback systems reinforce social tolerance and cooperative
behavior, then social living can persist in the absence of any conscious
recognition that material gains might also flow from mutual cooperation.
Based on the latest research, friendly and cooperative behaviors provide
psychological, physiological, and ecological benefits to social primates
which are positively reinforced by hormonal and neurological systems.
But, what about violence and war? Why is there an acceptance that
humans are innately aggressive and that we characterize our aggressive
feelings through violent actions? The general primate physiology does


not support this view and leads instead to a belief that cooperation is
innate to humans. Why the disconnect? Sometimes putting things in
perspective helps. There are more than six billion humans alive today--
all are social animals having constant hour-by-hour interactions with
other humans. And we're willing to bet that the overwhelming majority
of our six billion conspecifics are having days, weeks, even entire lives devoid
of violent interpersonal conflicts. This is not to naively underplay
crimes, wars, and state-level aggression found in modern times, but it
puts them in the domain of the anomalous. Who reads a news report of
an outbreak of terrible ethnic violence or genocide and thinks "What's so
unusual about that?--perfectly normal, happens every day to everyone."
War happens . . . crime happens, but what is the context in which they
happen? Why do murder rates vary so greatly from country to country,
from culture to culture? Are war, crimes, and violence the genetic, unalterable
norm . . . or are they specific to stresses that occur when too many
people want too few resources?
Following his exhaustive examination of ethnographic research on
modern societies ranging from nomadic foragers to urban industrialized
societies, Douglas Fry, an anthropologist at Åbo Akademi University in
Finland and the University of Arizona, documented the human potential
for cooperation and conflict resolution in a groundbreaking volume entitled
The Human Potential for Peace: An Anthropological Challenge to
Assumptions about War and Violence.94 Fry stresses that virtually all early
studies defining man (only men were defined!) by his capacity for killing
appear to be flawed. Sit down and prepare to be shocked with welcome
relief when you read Fry's statement: "War is either lacking or mild in the
majority of cultures!"95 Counter to assumptions of hostility between
groups and among individuals and recurring warfare over resources, the
typical pattern is for humans to get along rather well, relying on
resources within their own areas and respecting the resources of their
neighbors. After an examination of the actual ethnographic information
on nomadic foragers, Fry found the proposition that human
groups are pervasively hostile toward one another is simply not based
on facts but rather on "a plethora of faulty assumptions and overzealous
speculation."96 He points out that "[c]onflict is an inevitable
feature of social life, but clearly physical aggression is not the only option
for dealing with conflict" (author's emphasis).97 Behaviors for conflict

management catalogued in major cross-cultural studies include (1)
avoidance (disputants cease to interact), (2) toleration (the disputed issue
is not acknowledged by the concerned parties), (3) negotiation (mutually
acceptable compromises are created), and (4) settlement (a third party
deals with the problem, as in mediation, arbitration, or adjudication--
approaches very common in the U.S. and other industrialized nations).
Individuals and whole societies deal with conflicts in non-violent ways.
But these commonly used approaches are not very high profile or noticeable
on the media radar. "PEACE BREAKS OUT BETWEEN TWO
VILLAGES IN SOUTHEAST ASIA BECAUSE DISPUTANTS
DECIDE TO TOLERATE EACH OTHER!" or "AUSTRALIAN
OUTBACK RIFE WITH AVOIDANCE AFTER PERCEIVED
INSULT" are not the typical headlines we read. Fry found that only one
approach to conflict--unilateral self-redress (defined as one disputant
taking unilateral action in an attempt to prevail or punish another)--
might (our emphasis) involve physical aggression. He summarized his
findings by acknowledging the human propensity to behave assertively
and aggressively, but adamantly stating that just as inherent is the human
propensity to behave prosocially and cooperatively, with kindness and
consideration for others. Indeed, Fry's work has convinced him that the
very existence of human societies is dependent on the preponderance of
prosocial tendencies over assertive and aggressive ones.
We aren't trying to ignore the role of aggression and competition in
understanding primate and human social interactions. Our perspective,
however, is that affiliation, cooperation, and social tolerance associated
with long-term mutual benefits form the core of social group living. Our
earliest ancestors lived in a world populated by large, fearsome predators.
Strong indications from the fossil record and living primate species lead
to the conclusion that hominids were regularly hunted and required
social organization that promoted inconspicuous behaviors, minimal
internal conflicts, and coordinated vigilance.98 Ask yourself, in this
prehistoric
world of predators what would have been the best strategy to
avoid being eaten: Conspicuous, violent interpersonal conflicts? Or high
levels of cooperation and reciprocity to facilitate as inconspicuous a
presence as possible?
Now, what about chimps, warfare, and the demonic male theory? How
do they stand up in relation to all this new evidence on cooperative behavior?
As we said in opening this chapter we're finding that Man the

Hunter as a paradigm does not die easily. Well, the same can be said for its
first cousin, the demonic male theory. Richard Wrangham has attempted
to address some criticisms of the theories he proposes in his book Demonic
Males: Apes and the Origins of Human Violence, coauthored with Dale
Peterson.99 In striving to support the demonic male theory Wrangham
and his students cite a growing number of observed or suspected cases of
lethal attacks by chimps on chimps at a number of different research
sites,100 although the context of these attacks is rarely described and the
fact that each of the study sites suffers intense interference from habitat
encroachment, introduced diseases, hunting and poaching pressure, food
provisioning, and/or constant surveillance by primatologists is not addressed.
101 More evident, however, in the follow-up to Demonic Males
is a development of the theoretical argument purporting to explain
chimp and human violence in three ways. First, a belief that warfare in
humans and violent, deathly attacks in chimpanzees are examples of a
phenomenon Wrangham labels "coalitionary killing." According to his
explanation, adult male chimps and humans collaborate to kill or brutally
wound other adults: "The ancient origin of warfare is supported
by . . . evidence that . . . chimpanzees and humans share a common
ancestor around 5-6 mya."102
Secondly, Wrangham believes the principal adaptive explanation
linking coalitionary killing in chimpanzees and humans is the "imbalanceof-
power" hypothesis. Accordingly, chimpanzee males will attack other
groups if they outnumber them and have a low risk of injury to themselves.
Because of the complexity of modern warfare, these types of lethal
raids can be seen more readily in humans in "primitive" warfare among
"pre-state" societies.103
Finally, the long-term evolutionary explanation of coalitionary
killing is a "dominance drive" that favors unprovoked aggression by the
opportunity to attack at low personal risk. The dominance drive is related
to increased genetic fitness, allowing the killers to leave more of
their dominant-killer genes to the next generation.104
Wrangham assumes certain behaviors resulting in conspecific killing
among ants, wolves, chimpanzees, and humans (especially those in
"primitive, pre-state" societies) are similar phenomena. Presumably they
have the same biological bases and motivations, and are driven by the
same underlying natural causes. He gives these behaviors the label "coalitionary
killing" and, in creating a name, he creates a phenomenon. When
comparisons are made between human and animal behavior, and it is
assumed that behaviors that are similar in appearance have similar functions
and evolutionary histories, a basic principle of biology is being
violated. Form alone does not provide information about function nor
shared genetic or evolutionary history. Referring to "rape" in dragonflies,
"slavery" in ants, or "coalitionary killing" in chimpanzees and humans may
sound like science but, to paraphrase Jonathan Marks's reprimand, science
is concerned with biological connections, not metaphorical descriptions.105
Another aspect of the demonic male theory is the argument that an
imbalance of power must be an incentive to coalitionary killing. Are we to
suspect that whenever a group of chimpanzees or humans perceives weakness
in an individual or another group, they will attack and kill? In fact,
neither chimpanzees nor humans attack in all circumstances of
imbalance-of-power, and coalitionary killing is extremely rare in both
species. (Remember Douglas Fry's findings that there are many ways to
handle conflict--avoidance, toleration, negotiation, settlement?) One
major set of questions pervades all of the observations of lethal chimpanzee
attacks: What is the underlying motivation and what types of
stressors prompt lethal attacks to occur in some cases and not in others?
Also, in chimpanzees, how much does severe habitat encroachment,
harassment, provisioning, crowding, hunting, and even constant surveillance
affect the lives of these highly intelligent animals who are now in
danger of extinction in almost every forest in which they occur? And, how
do many of these same stressors in the modern world affect humans?
The third part of the demonic male theory--that dominance drives
are present--needs clarification. Robert Hinde, one of the most respected
animal behaviorists of our time, has considered the concept of
psychological and behavioral "drives" at length. He emphasizes that the
word itself can make for difficulties because it has been used in so many
different ways. Where measures of behavior can be directly correlated,
such as drinking leading to a cessation of thirst, the proposition of an
intervening drive variable may be a valuable tool for research. However,
when correlations between behaviors are not perfect, Hinde cautions,
"such a concept is misleading and can be a positive hindrance."106 The
use of the concept of drive in relation to the extremely complex set of
behavioral and contextual phenomena involved in dominance seems to
us to be entirely inappropriate.

CONVENTIONAL WISDOM AS SCIENCE
How do theories or new paradigms in science get accepted or, on the
other hand, ignored? Unfortunately, the answers to this question may
turn out to be much more political than scientific. In 1962 a philosopher
of science named Thomas Kuhn wrote a classic book, The Structure of
Scientific Revolution. In it he argued that scientists examine the evidence
related to their questions and come up with the most parsimonious
explanation (or theory, or paradigm) that fits the data and techniques
currently available at the time. However, the evidence is also filtered
through a scientist's own background and theoretical orientation, by his
or her world view and cultural milieu. Changing currently popular, engrained
paradigms, those that have become "conventional wisdom" like
the Man the Hunter theory, is very difficult especially if the theory also
fits conventional cultural views of the world. Scientists, like most people,
are generally conservative in their ability to adopt new paradigms.
Once a paradigm becomes established within a scientific community,
most practitioners become technicians working within the parameters of
the theory but rarely questioning the validity of the theory itself. In fact
even questioning the theory is often thought of as unscientific because
the new theory and the old are incompatible and the internal logic of
each paradigm differs. Proponents of each paradigm are often talking
past one another--speaking a different language. As expressed by Shirley
Strum in her landmark book Almost Human, in a passage describing her
efforts to get primatologists to accept her observations that aggression
was not as pervasive or important an influence on the evolution of baboon
behavior as had previously been thought: "In science, according to
Kuhn, ideas do not change simply because new facts win out over outmoded
ones. Many more social, cultural and historical variables make up
the complete picture. Since the facts can't speak for themselves, it is their
human advocates who win or lose the day."107
So, yes, science is a matter of accumulating better and better evidence
to fit a theory . . . or of finding that both old evidence and new evidence
are better accommodated by a completely new theory. And, in the end,
even with new evidence and a better way of explaining it, ultimately, the
politics of science must take its course. It is up to the audience to weigh
the evidence. Discrepancies among the theories and the evidence must be
evaluated. Once these discrepancies are seen to be overwhelming, the
new paradigm will be accepted in favor of the old. Kuhn was not without
a sense of humor, for as his friend, the renowned social anthropologist
Clifford Geertz notes, Kuhn had an embroidered motto hanging in his
house which stated "God Save This Paradigm."108
Science is not always truth. Science is just the best way to answer a
particular question given the available evidence and technology at a particular
time and place. At this time and place, we believe Man the
Hunted as a paradigm of early human evolution best fits the currently
available evidence. Future evidence, nonetheless, could prove us wrong;
we can only wait to see what unfolds.





REALLY OUR LAST WORDS
There's little doubt that modern humans, particularly those of us in
Western cultures, think of ourselves as the dominant form of life on
earth. And we seldom question whether that view also held true for our
species' distant past (or even for the present, outside of urban areas). We
swagger like the toughest kids on the block as we spread our technology
over the landscape and irrevocably change it for other cultures and
species, aware in a cursory way that we may cause our own demise in
somewhat record time but unwilling to stop.
Current reality does appear to perch humans atop a planetary food
chain. The vision of our utter superiority may even hold true for the last
500 years, but that's just the proverbial blink of an eye when compared to
the seven million years that our hominid ancestors have wandered the
planet. We like to envision a less-powerful inauguration of our species.
Consider this image: smallish beings (adult females weighing maybe 60
pounds, males heavier) with a rather unimpressive brain-to-body ratio,
possessing the ability to stand and move upright. Basically, beings who
spent millions of years as a primate meal walking around on two legs.
(Rather than Man the Hunter, we may need to see ourselves as more like
Bipedal Protein Pops.) Our species began as just one of many that had to
be cautious and resourceful, depending on other group members when
danger reared its head. We were quite simply small beasts within a large
and complex ecosystem.

Is Man the Hunter a cultural construction of the West? Belief in a
sinful, violent ancestor does fit nicely with Christian views of original sin
and the necessity to be saved from our own awful, yet natural, desires.
Other religions don't necessarily emphasize the ancient savage in the human
past; indeed, many modern-day hunter-gatherers, who have to live
as part of nature, hold supernatural beliefs in which humans are a part of
the web of life, not superior creatures who dominate or ravage nature and
each other.
Think of Man the Hunted, and you put a different face on our
past. The shift forces us to see that for most of our evolutionary existence,
instead of being the toughest kids on the block, we needed to
live in groups (like most other primates) and work together to avoid
predators. Thus an urge to cooperate can clearly be seen as a functional
tool rather than a Pollyanna-ish nicety, and deadly competition among
individuals or nations may be highly aberrant behavior, not hard-wired
survival techniques. The same aberrance is true of our destructive
domination of the earth by technological toys gone mad.
Raymond Dart declared "the loathsome cruelty of mankind to man is
explicable only in terms of man's carnivorous and cannibalistic
origin."109 While Dart may have equated predators and their carnivorous
eating habits with cruelty, predation is just a way of getting food, not a
cruel thirst for blood. But, forgetting Dart's unscientific subjectivity, if
our origin was neither carnivorous nor cannibalistic, we have no excuse
for our loathsome behavior. Our earliest evolutionary history is not
pushing us to be awful bullies. Instead, our millions of years as prey suggest
that we should be able to take our ancestral tool kit of sociality,
cooperation, interdependency, and mutual protection and use it to make
a brighter future for ourselves and our planet.
We evolved as a mainly plant-eating species that also ate some animal
protein collected opportunistically. But this latter activity did not make
us a predator or a scavenger. We hunted but were not hunters, and we
scavenged but were not scavengers. We are neither naturally aggressive
hunters and killers nor are we always kind and loving. Humans have the
capacity to be both. It is what we learn and our life experiences, our
world view, and our culture that have the greatest influence on our behavior,
even how we react to stress. That is exactly why it is necessary to
comprehend that we have not inherited a "propensity" to kill derived
from our hunting past. We are no more born to be hunters than to be
gardeners. We are no more inherent killers than we are angels. Humans
are what they learn to be.
We're making the statements above with the intention they will be
our last words on the subject of Man the Hunter versus Man the
Hunted. (Nevertheless, like an '80s rock band who vow there'll be no
more tours, but find the lure of going on the road too great to resist . . .
we might be persuaded to sing again!)
286

_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
Marxism-Thaxis@greenhouse.economics.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://greenhouse.economics.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to