Hello Robert

<snip>

> > Life for humans and pre-humans too has always been far more a
> > cooperative venture. Yes, all abuses are old, but to ascribe to them
> > a major and continuing role in our social development is a Victorian
> > idea and it's quite easily debunked. It's yet another out-of-place
> > idea that's gained more and more sway in the popular mind over the
> > last 25-30 years, wonder why that might be (not!)?
>
>       Ok, I think I'm not expressing my intent correctly.  I'm not excusing
>deviant behavior, merely pointing out that it has its roots in very
>ancient patterns.  We are free to control our urges and impulses, and
>for the most part, the role of socialization requires such restraint.
>
> >
> > Please have a read of this, you'll enjoy it:
> >
> > http://snipurl.com/o8fg
> > Foreign Affairs
> > A Natural History of Peace
> > By Robert M. Sapolsky
> >  From Foreign Affairs, January/February 2006
> >
> > Not the whole story though. A major difference is that the pre-human
> > apes left the forests and took to the plains and what happened to
> > them there. Plains, note, not caves!
>
>       I get an error when I try to go there.

<snip>

http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20060101faessay85110/robert-m-sapolsky/a 
-natural-history-of-peace.html?mode=print

A Natural History of Peace
By Robert M. Sapolsky

 From Foreign Affairs, January/February 2006

Summary: Humans like to think that they are unique, but the study of 
other primates has called into question the exceptionalism of our 
species. So what does primatology have to say about war and peace? 
Contrary to what was believed just a few decades ago, humans are not 
"killer apes" destined for violent conflict, but can make their own 
history.

Robert M. Sapolsky is John A. and Cynthia Fry Gunn Professor of 
Biological Sciences and Professor of Neurology and Neurological 
Sciences at Stanford University. His most recent book is "Monkeyluv: 
And Other Essays on Our Lives as Animals."

THE NAKED APE

The evolutionary biologist Theodosius Dobzhansky once said, "All 
species are unique, but humans are uniquest." Humans have long taken 
pride in their specialness. But the study of other primates is 
rendering the concept of such human exceptionalism increasingly 
suspect.

Some of the retrenchment has been relatively palatable, such as with 
the workings of our bodies. Thus we now know that a baboon heart can 
be transplanted into a human body and work for a few weeks, and human 
blood types are coded in Rh factors named after the rhesus monkeys 
that possess similar blood variability.

More discomfiting is the continuum that has been demonstrated in the 
realm of cognition. We now know, for example, that other species 
invent tools and use them with dexterity and local cultural 
variation. Other primates display "semanticity" (the use of symbols 
to refer to objects and actions) in their communication in ways that 
would impress any linguist. And experiments have shown other primates 
to possess a "theory of mind," that is, the ability to recognize that 
different individuals can have different thoughts and knowledge.

Our purported uniqueness has been challenged most, however, with 
regard to our social life. Like the occasional human hermit, there 
are a few primates that are typically asocial (such as the 
orangutan). Apart from those, however, it turns out that one cannot 
understand a primate in isolation from its social group. Across the 
150 or so species of primates, the larger the average social group, 
the larger the cortex relative to the rest of the brain. The fanciest 
part of the primate brain, in other words, seems to have been 
sculpted by evolution to enable us to gossip and groom, cooperate and 
cheat, and obsess about who is mating with whom. Humans, in short, 
are yet another primate with an intense and rich social life -- a 
fact that raises the question of whether primatology can teach us 
something about a rather important part of human sociality, war and 
peace.

It used to be thought that humans were the only savagely violent 
primate. "We are the only species that kills its own," one might have 
heard intoned portentously at the end of nature films several decades 
ago. That view fell by the wayside in the 1960s as it became clear 
that some other primates kill their fellows aplenty. Males kill; 
females kill. Some kill one another's infants with cold-blooded 
stratagems worthy of Richard III. Some use their toolmaking skills to 
fashion bigger and better cudgels. Some other primates even engage in 
what can only be called warfare -- organized, proactive group 
violence directed at other populations.

As field studies of primates expanded, what became most striking was 
the variation in social practices across species. Yes, some primate 
species have lives filled with violence, frequent and varied. But 
life among others is filled with communitarianism, egalitarianism, 
and cooperative child rearing.

Patterns emerged. In less aggressive species, such as gibbons or 
marmosets, groups tend to live in lush rain forests where food is 
plentiful and life is easy. Females and males tend to be the same 
size, and the males lack secondary sexual markers such as long, sharp 
canines or garish coloring. Couples mate for life, and males help 
substantially with child care. In violent species, on the other hand, 
such as baboons and rhesus monkeys, the opposite conditions prevail.

The most disquieting fact about the violent species was the apparent 
inevitability of their behavior. Certain species seemed simply to be 
the way they were, fixed products of the interplay of evolution and 
ecology, and that was that. And although human males might not be 
inflexibly polygamous or come with bright red butts and six-inch 
canines designed for tooth-to-tooth combat, it was clear that our 
species had at least as much in common with the violent primates as 
with the gentle ones. "In their nature" thus became "in our nature." 
This was the humans-as-killer-apes theory popularized by the writer 
Robert Ardrey, according to which humans have as much chance of 
becoming intrinsically peaceful as they have of growing prehensile 
tails.

That view always had little more scientific rigor than a Planet of 
the Apes movie, but it took a great deal of field research to figure 
out just what should supplant it. After decades' more work, the 
picture has become quite interesting. Some primate species, it turns 
out, are indeed simply violent or peaceful, with their behavior 
driven by their social structures and ecological settings. More 
important, however, some primate species can make peace despite 
violent traits that seem built into their natures. The challenge now 
is to figure out under what conditions that can happen, and whether 
humans can manage the trick themselves.

PAX BONOBO

Primatology has long been dominated by studies of the chimpanzee, due 
in large part to the phenomenally influential research of Jane 
Goodall, whose findings from her decades of observations in the wild 
have been widely disseminated. National Geographic specials based on 
Goodall's work would always include the reminder that chimps are our 
closest relatives, a notion underlined by the fact that we share an 
astonishing 98 percent of our DNA with them. And Goodall and other 
chimp researchers have carefully documented an endless stream of 
murders, cannibalism, and organized group violence among their 
subjects. Humans' evolutionary fate thus seemed sealed, smeared by 
the excesses of these first cousins.

But all along there has been another chimp species, one traditionally 
ignored because of its small numbers; its habitat in remote, 
impenetrable rain forests; and the fact that its early chroniclers 
published in Japanese. These skinny little creatures were originally 
called "pygmy chimps" and were thought of as uninteresting, some sort 
of regressed subspecies of the real thing. Now known as bonobos, they 
are today recognized as a separate and distinct species that 
taxonomically and genetically is just as closely related to humans as 
the standard chimp. And boy, is this ever a different ape.

Male bonobos are not particularly aggressive and lack the massive 
musculature typical of species that engage in a lot of fighting (such 
as the standard chimp). Moreover, the bonobo social system is female 
dominated, food is often shared, and there are well-developed means 
for reconciling social tensions. And then there is the sex.

Bonobo sex is the prurient highlight of primatology conferences, and 
leads parents to shield their children's eyes when watching nature 
films. Bonobos have sex in every conceivable position and some 
seemingly inconceivable ones, in pairs and groups, between genders 
and within genders, to greet each other and to resolve conflicts, to 
work off steam after a predator scare, to celebrate finding food or 
to cajole its sharing, or just because. As the sound bite has it, 
chimps are from Mars and bonobos are from Venus.

All is not perfect in the bonobo commune, and they still have 
hierarchies and conflict (why else invent conflict resolution?). 
Nonetheless, they are currently among the trendiest of species to 
analyze, a wonderful antidote to their hard-boiled relatives. The 
trouble is, while we have a pretty good sense of what bonobos are 
like, we have little insight into how they got that way. Furthermore, 
this is basically what all bonobos seem to be like -- a classic case 
of in-their-nature-ness. There is even recent evidence for a genetic 
component to the phenomenon, in that bonobos (but not chimps) possess 
a version of a gene that makes affiliative behavior (behavior that 
promotes group cohesion) more pleasurable to males. So -- a wondrous 
species (and one, predictably, teetering on the edge of extinction). 
But besides being useful for taking the wind out of we-be-chimps 
fatalists, the bonobo has little to say to us. We are not bonobos, 
and never can be.

WARRIORS, COME OUT TO PLAY

In contrast to the social life of bonobos, the social life of chimps 
is not pretty. Nor is that of rhesus monkeys, nor savanna baboons -- 
a species found in groups of 50 to 100 in the African grasslands and 
one I have studied for close to 30 years. Hierarchies among baboons 
are strict, as are their consequences. Among males, high rank is 
typically achieved by a series of successful violent challenges. 
Spoils, such as meat, are unevenly divided. Most males die of the 
consequences of violence, and roughly half of their aggression is 
directed at third parties (some high-ranking male in a bad mood takes 
it out on an innocent bystander, such as a female or a subordinate 
male).

Male baboons, moreover, can fight amazingly dirty. I saw this happen 
a few years ago in one of the troops I study: Two males had fought, 
and one, having been badly trounced, assumed a crouching stance, with 
his rear end up in the air. This is universally recognized among 
savanna baboons as an abject gesture of subordination, signaling an 
end to the conflict, and the conventional response on the part of the 
victorious male is to subject the other to a ritualized gesture of 
dominance (such as mounting him). In this instance, however, the 
winner, approaching the loser as if to mount him, instead abruptly 
gave him a deep slash with his canines.

A baboon group, in short, is an unlikely breeding ground for 
pacifists. Nevertheless, there are some interesting exceptions. In 
recent years, for example, it has been recognized that a certain 
traditional style of chest-thumping evolutionary thinking is wrong. 
According to the standard logic, males compete with one another 
aggressively in order to achieve and maintain a high rank, which will 
in turn enable them to dominate reproduction and thus maximize the 
number of copies of their genes that are passed on to the next 
generation. But although aggression among baboons does indeed have 
something to do with attaining a high rank, it turns out to have 
virtually nothing to do with maintaining it. Dominant males rarely 
are particularly aggressive, and those that are typically are on 
their way out: the ones that need to use it are often about to lose 
it. Instead, maintaining dominance requires social intelligence and 
impulse control -- the ability to form prudent coalitions, show some 
tolerance of subordinates, and ignore most provocations.

Recent work, moreover, has demonstrated that females have something 
to say about which males get to pass on their genes. The traditional 
view was based on a "linear access" model of reproduction: if one 
female is in heat, the alpha male gets to mate with her; if two are 
in heat, the alpha male and the second-ranking male get their 
opportunity; and so on. Yet we now know that female baboons are 
pretty good at getting away from even champions of male-male 
competition if they want to and can sneak off instead with another 
male they actually desire. And who would that be? Typically, it is a 
male that has followed a different strategy of building affiliative 
relations with the female -- grooming her a lot, helping to take care 
of her kids, not beating her up. These nice-guy males seem to pass on 
at least as many copies of their genes as their more aggressive 
peers, not least because they can go like this for years, without the 
life-shortening burnout and injuries of the gladiators.

And so the crude picture of combat as the sole path to evolutionary 
success is wrong. The average male baboon does opt for the combative 
route, but there are important phases of his life when aggression is 
less important than social intelligence and restraint, and there are 
evolutionarily fruitful alternative courses of action.

Even within the bare-knuckle world of male-male aggression, we are 
now recognizing some surprising outposts of primate civility. For one 
thing, primates can make up after a fight. Such reconciliation was 
first described by Frans de Waal, of Emory University, in the early 
1980s; it has now been observed in some 27 different species of 
primates, including male chimps, and it works as it is supposed to, 
reducing the odds of further aggression between the two 
ex-combatants. And various primates, including male baboons, will 
sometimes cooperate, for example by supporting one another in a 
fight. Coalitions can involve reciprocity and even induce what 
appears to be a sense of justice or fairness. In a remarkable study 
by de Waal and one of his students, capuchin monkeys were housed in 
adjacent cages. A monkey could obtain food on its own (by pulling a 
tray of food toward its cage) or with help from a neighbor (by 
pulling a heavier tray together); in the latter case, only one of the 
monkeys was given access to the food in question. The monkeys that 
collaborated proved more likely to share it with their neighbor.

Even more striking are lifelong patterns of cooperation among some 
male chimps, such as those that form bands of brothers. Among certain 
primate species, all the members of one gender will leave their home 
troop around puberty, thus avoiding the possibility of genetically 
deleterious inbreeding. Among chimps, the females leave home, and as 
a result, male chimps typically spend their lives in the company of 
close male relatives. Animal behaviorists steeped in game theory 
spend careers trying to figure out how reciprocal cooperation gets 
started among nonrelatives, but it is clear that stable reciprocity 
among relatives emerges readily.

Thus, even the violent primates engage in reconciliation and 
cooperation -- but only up to a point. For starters, as noted in 
regard to the bonobo, there would be nothing to reconcile without 
violence and conflict in the first place. Furthermore, reconciliation 
is not universal: female savanna baboons are good at it, for example, 
but males are not. Most important, even among species and genders 
that do reconcile, it is not an indiscriminate phenomenon: 
individuals are more likely to reconcile with those who can be useful 
to them. This was demonstrated in a brilliant study by Marina Cords, 
of Columbia University, in which the value of some relationships 
among a type of macaque monkey was artificially raised. Animals were 
again caged next to each other under conditions in which they could 
obtain food by themselves or through cooperation, and those pairs 
that developed the capacity for cooperation were three times as 
likely to reconcile after induced aggression as noncooperators. 
Tension-reducing reconciliation, in other words, is most likely to 
occur among animals who already are in the habit of cooperating and 
have an incentive to keep doing so.

Some deflating points emerge from the studies of cooperation as well, 
such as the fact that coalitions are notoriously unstable. In one 
troop of baboons I studied in the early 1980s, male-male coalitions 
lasted less than two days on average before collapsing, and most 
cases of such collapse involved one partner failing to reciprocate 
or, even more dramatically, defecting to the other side during a 
fight. Finally, and most discouraging, is the use to which most 
coalitions are put. In theory, cooperation could trump individualism 
in order to, say, improve food gathering or defend against predators. 
In practice, two baboons that cooperate typically do so in order to 
make a third miserable.

Goodall was the first to report the profoundly disquieting fact that 
bands of related male chimps carry out cooperative "border patrols" 
-- searching along the geographic boundary separating their group 
from another and attacking neighboring males they encounter, even to 
the point of killing other groups off entirely. In-group cooperation 
can thus usher in not peace and tranquility, but rather more 
efficient extermination.

So primate species with some of the most aggressive and stratified 
social systems have been seen to cooperate and resolve conflicts -- 
but not consistently, not necessarily for benign purposes, and not in 
a cumulative way that could lead to some fundamentally non-Hobbesian 
social outcomes. The lesson appears to be not that violent primates 
can transcend their natures, but merely that the natures of these 
species are subtler and more multifaceted than previously thought. At 
least that was the lesson until quite recently.

OLD PRIMATES AND NEW TRICKS

To some extent, the age-old "nature versus nurture" debate is silly. 
The action of genes is completely intertwined with the environment in 
which they function; in a sense, it is pointless to even discuss what 
gene X does, and we should consider instead only what gene X does in 
environment Y. Nonetheless, if one had to predict the behavior of 
some organism on the basis of only one fact, one might still want to 
know whether the most useful fact would be about genetics or about 
the environment.

The first two studies to show that primates were somewhat independent 
from their "natures" involved a classic technique in behavioral 
genetics called cross-fostering. Suppose some animal has engaged in a 
particular behavior for generations -- call it behavior A. We want to 
know if that behavior is due to shared genes or to a 
multigenerationally shared environment. Researchers try to answer the 
question by cross-fostering the animal, that is, switching the 
animal's mother at birth so that she is raised by one with behavior 
B, and then watching to see which behavior the animal displays when 
she grows up. One problem with this approach is that an animal's 
environment does not begin at birth -- a fetus shares a very intimate 
environment with its mother, namely the body's circulation, 
chock-full of hormones and nutrients that can cause lifelong changes 
in brain function and behavior. Therefore, the approach can be 
applied only asymmetrically: if a behavior persists in a new 
environment, one cannot conclude that genes are the cause, but if a 
behavior changes in a new environment, then one can conclude that 
genes are not the cause. This is where the two studies come in.

In the early 1970s, a highly respected primatologist named Hans 
Kummer was working in Ethiopia, in a region containing two species of 
baboons with markedly different social systems. Savanna baboons live 
in large troops, with plenty of adult females and males. Hamadryas 
baboons, in contrast, have a more complex, multilevel society. 
Because they live in a much harsher, drier region, hamadryas have a 
distinctive ecological problem. Some resources are singular and 
scarce -- like a rare watering hole or a good cliff face to sleep on 
at night in order to evade predators -- and large numbers of animals 
are likely to want to share them. Other resources, such as the 
vegetation they eat, are sparse and widely dispersed, requiring 
animals to function in small, separate groups. As a result, hamadryas 
have evolved a "harem" structure -- a single adult male surrounded by 
a handful of adult females and their children -- with large numbers 
of discrete harems converging, peacefully, for short periods at the 
occasional desirable watering hole or cliff face.

Kummer conducted a simple experiment, trapping an adult female 
savanna baboon and releasing her into a hamadryas troop and trapping 
an adult female hamadryas and releasing her into a savanna troop. 
Among hamadryas, if a male threatens a female, it is almost certainly 
this brute who dominates the harem, and the only way for the female 
to avoid injury is to approach him -- i.e., return to the fold. But 
among savanna baboons, if a male threatens a female, the way for her 
to avoid injury is to run away. In Kummer's experiment, the females 
who were dropped in among a different species initially carried out 
their species-typical behavior, a major faux pas in the new 
neighborhood. But gradually, they assimilated the new rules. How long 
did this learning take? About an hour. In other words, millennia of 
genetic differences separating the two species, a lifetime of 
experience with a crucial social rule for each female, and a 
miniscule amount of time to reverse course completely.

The second experiment was set up by de Waal and his student Denise 
Johanowicz in the early 1990s, working with two macaque monkey 
species. By any human standards, male rhesus macaques are unappealing 
animals. Their hierarchies are rigid, those at the top seize a 
disproportionate share of the spoils, they enforce this inequity with 
ferocious aggression, and they rarely reconcile after fights. Male 
stump tail macaques, in contrast, which share almost all of their 
genes with their rhesus macaque cousins, display much less 
aggression, more affiliative behaviors, looser hierarchies, and more 
egalitarianism.

Working with captive primates, de Waal and Johanowicz created a 
mixed-sex social group of juvenile macaques, combining rhesus and 
stump tails together. Remarkably, instead of the rhesus macaques 
bullying the stump tails, over the course of a few months, the rhesus 
males adopted the stump tails' social style, eventually even matching 
the stump tails' high rates of reconciliatory behavior. It so 
happens, moreover, that stump tails and rhesus macaques use different 
gestures when reconciling. The rhesus macaques in the study did not 
start using the stump tails' reconciliatory gestures, but rather 
increased the incidence of their own species-typical gestures. In 
other words, they were not merely imitating the stump tails' 
behavior; they were incorporating the concept of frequent 
reconciliation into their own social practices. When the newly 
warm-and-fuzzy rhesus macaques were returned to a larger, all-rhesus 
group, finally, their new behavioral style persisted.

This is nothing short of extraordinary. But it brings up one last 
question: When those rhesus macaques were transferred back into the 
all-rhesus world, did they spread their insights and behaviors to the 
others? Alas, they did not. For that, we need to move on to our final 
case.

LEFT BEHIND

In the early 1980s, "Forest Troop," a group of savanna baboons I had 
been studying -- virtually living with -- for years, was going about 
its business in a national park in Kenya when a neighboring baboon 
group had a stroke of luck: its territory encompassed a tourist lodge 
that expanded its operations and consequently the amount of food 
tossed into its garbage dump. Baboons are omnivorous, and "Garbage 
Dump Troop" was delighted to feast on leftover drumsticks, half-eaten 
hamburgers, remnants of chocolate cake, and anything else that wound 
up there. Soon they had shifted to sleeping in the trees immediately 
above the pit, descending each morning just in time for the day's 
dumping of garbage. (They soon got quite obese from the rich diet and 
lack of exercise, but that is another story.)

The development produced nearly as dramatic a shift in the social 
behavior of Forest Troop. Each morning, approximately half of its 
adult males would infiltrate Garbage Dump Troop's territory, 
descending on the pit in time for the day's dumping and battling the 
resident males for access to the garbage. The Forest Troop males that 
did this shared two traits: they were particularly combative (which 
was necessary to get the food away from the other baboons), and they 
were not very interested in socializing (the raids took place early 
in the morning, during the hours when the bulk of a savanna baboon's 
daily communal grooming occurs).

Soon afterward, tuberculosis, a disease that moves with devastating 
speed and severity in nonhuman primates, broke out in Garbage Dump 
Troop. Over the next year, most of its members died, as did all of 
the males from Forest Troop who had foraged at the dump.[See Footnote 
#1] The results were that Forest Troop was left with males who were 
less aggressive and more social than average and the troop now had 
double its previous female-to-male ratio.

The social consequences of these changes were dramatic. There 
remained a hierarchy among the Forest Troop males, but it was far 
looser than before: compared with other, more typical savanna baboon 
groups, high-ranking males rarely harassed subordinates and 
occasionally even relinquished contested resources to them. 
Aggression was less frequent, particularly against third parties. And 
rates of affiliative behaviors, such as males and females grooming 
each other or sitting together, soared. There were even instances, 
now and then, of adult males grooming each other -- a behavior nearly 
as unprecedented as baboons sprouting wings.

This unique social milieu did not arise merely as a function of the 
skewed sex ratio; other primatologists have occasionally reported on 
troops with similar ratios but without a comparable social 
atmosphere. What was key was not just the predominance of females, 
but the type of male that remained. The demographic disaster -- what 
evolutionary biologists term a "selective bottleneck" -- had produced 
a savanna baboon troop quite different from what most experts would 
have anticipated.

But the largest surprise did not come until some years later. Female 
savanna baboons spend their lives in the troop into which they are 
born, whereas males leave their birth troop around puberty; a troop's 
adult males have thus all grown up elsewhere and immigrated as 
adolescents. By the early 1990s, none of the original low 
aggression/high affiliation males of Forest Troop's tuberculosis 
period was still alive; all of the group's adult males had joined 
after the epidemic. Despite this, the troop's unique social milieu 
persisted -- as it does to this day, some 20 years after the 
selective bottleneck. In other words, adolescent males that enter 
Forest Troop after having grown up elsewhere wind up adopting the 
unique behavioral style of the resident males. As defined by both 
anthropologists and animal behaviorists, "culture" consists of local 
behavioral variations, occurring for nongenetic and nonecological 
reasons, that last beyond the time of their originators. Forest 
Troop's low aggression/high affiliation society constitutes nothing 
less than a multigenerational benign culture.

Continuous study of the troop has yielded some insights into how its 
culture is transmitted to newcomers. Genetics obviously plays no 
role, nor apparently does self-selection: adolescent males that 
transfer into the troop are no different from those that transfer 
into other troops, displaying on arrival similarly high rates of 
aggression and low rates of affiliation. Nor is there evidence that 
new males are taught to act in benign ways by the residents. One 
cannot rule out the possibility that some observational learning is 
occurring, but it is difficult to detect given that the distinctive 
feature of this culture is not the performance of a unique behavior 
but the performance of typical behaviors at atypically extreme rates.

To date, the most interesting hint about the mechanism of 
transmission is the way recently transferred males are treated by 
Forest Troop's resident females. In a typical savanna baboon troop, 
newly transferred adolescent males spend years slowly working their 
way into the social fabric; they are extremely low ranking -- ignored 
by females and noted by adult males only as convenient targets for 
aggression. In Forest Troop, by contrast, new male transfers are 
inundated with female attention soon after their arrival. Resident 
females first present themselves sexually to new males an average of 
18 days after the males arrive, and they first groom the new males an 
average of 20 days after they arrive (normal savanna baboons 
introduce such behaviors after 63 and 78 days, respectively). 
Furthermore, these welcoming gestures occur more frequently in Forest 
Troop during the early post-transfer period, and there is four times 
as much grooming of males by females in Forest Troop as elsewhere. 
 From almost the moment they arrive, in other words, new males find 
out that in Forest Troop, things are done differently.

At present, I think the most plausible explanation is that this 
troop's special culture is not passed on actively but simply emerges, 
facilitated by the actions of the resident members. Living in a group 
with half the typical number of males, and with the males being nice 
guys to boot, Forest Troop's females become more relaxed and less 
wary. As a result, they are more willing to take a chance and reach 
out socially to new arrivals, even if the new guys are typical jerky 
adolescents at first. The new males, in turn, finding themselves 
treated so well, eventually relax and adopt the behaviors of the 
troop's distinctive social milieu.

NATURAL BORN KILLERS?

Are there any lessons to be learned here that can be applied to 
human-on-human violence -- apart, that is, from the possible 
desirability of giving fatal cases of tuberculosis to aggressive 
people?

Any biological anthropologist opining about human behavior is 
required by long-established tradition to note that for 99 percent of 
human history, humans lived in small, stable bands of related 
hunter-gatherers. Game theorists have shown that a small, cohesive 
group is the perfect setting for the emergence of cooperation: the 
identities of the other participants are known, there are 
opportunities for multiple iterations of games (and thus the ability 
to punish cheaters), and there is open-book play (players can acquire 
reputations). And so, those hunter-gatherer bands were highly 
egalitarian. Empirical and experimental data have also shown the 
cooperative advantages of small groups at the opposite human extreme, 
namely in the corporate world.

But the lack of violence within small groups can come at a heavy 
price. Small homogenous groups with shared values can be a nightmare 
of conformity. They can also be dangerous for outsiders. 
Unconsciously emulating the murderous border patrols of closely 
related male chimps, militaries throughout history have sought to 
form small, stable units; inculcate them with rituals of 
pseudokinship; and thereby produce efficient, cooperative killing 
machines.

Is it possible to achieve the cooperative advantages of a small group 
without having the group reflexively view outsiders as the Other? One 
way is through trade. Voluntary economic exchanges not only produce 
profits; they can also reduce social friction -- as the macaques 
demonstrated by being more likely to reconcile with a valued partner 
in food acquisition.

Another way is through a fission-fusion social structure, in which 
the boundaries between groups are not absolute and impermeable. The 
model here is not the multilevel society of the hamadryas baboons, 
both because their basic social unit of the harem is despotic and 
because their fusion consists of nothing more than lots of animals 
occasionally coming together to utilize a resource peacefully. Human 
hunter-gatherers are a better example to follow, in that their small 
bands often merge, split, or exchange members for a while, with such 
fluidity helping to solve not only environmental resource problems 
but social problems as well. The result is that instead of the 
all-or-nothing world of male chimps, in which there is only one's own 
group and the enemy, hunter-gatherers can enjoy gradations of 
familiarity and cooperation stretching over large areas.

The interactions among hunter-gatherers resemble those of other 
networks, where there are individual nodes (in this case, small 
groups) and where the majority of interactions between the nodes are 
local ones, with the frequency of interactions dropping off as a 
function of distance. Mathematicians have shown that when the ratios 
among short-, middle-, and long-distance interactions are optimal, 
networks are robust: they are dominated by highly cooperative 
clusters of local interactions, but they also retain the potential 
for less frequent, long-distance communication and coordination.

Optimizing the fission-fusion interactions of hunter-gatherer 
networks is easy: cooperate within the band; schedule frequent joint 
hunts with the next band over; have occasional hunts with bands 
somewhat farther out; have a legend of a single shared hunt with a 
mythic band at the end of the earth. Optimizing the fission-fusion 
interactions in contemporary human networks is vastly harder, but the 
principles are the same.

In exploring these subjects, one often encounters a pessimism built 
around the notion that humans, as primates, are hard-wired for 
xenophobia. Some brain-imaging studies have appeared to support this 
view in a particularly discouraging way. There is a structure deep 
inside the brain called the amygdala, which plays a key role in fear 
and aggression, and experiments have shown that when subjects are 
presented with a face of someone from a different race, the amygdala 
gets metabolically active -- aroused, alert, ready for action. This 
happens even when the face is presented "subliminally," which is to 
say, so rapidly that the subject does not consciously see it.

More recent studies, however, should mitigate this pessimism. Test a 
person who has a lot of experience with people of different races, 
and the amygdala does not activate. Or, as in a wonderful experiment 
by Susan Fiske, of Princeton University, subtly bias the subject 
beforehand to think of people as individuals rather than as members 
of a group, and the amygdala does not budge. Humans may be hard-wired 
to get edgy around the Other, but our views on who falls into that 
category are decidedly malleable.

In the early 1960s, a rising star of primatology, Irven DeVore, of 
Harvard University, published the first general overview of the 
subject. Discussing his own specialty, savanna baboons, he wrote that 
they "have acquired an aggressive temperament as a defense against 
predators, and aggressiveness cannot be turned on and off like a 
faucet. It is an integral part of the monkeys' personalities, so 
deeply rooted that it makes them potential aggressors in every 
situation." Thus the savanna baboon became, literally, a textbook 
example of life in an aggressive, highly stratified, male-dominated 
society. Yet within a few years, members of the species demonstrated 
enough behavioral plasticity to transform a society of theirs into a 
baboon utopia.

The first half of the twentieth century was drenched in the blood 
spilled by German and Japanese aggression, yet only a few decades 
later it is hard to think of two countries more pacific. Sweden spent 
the seventeenth century rampaging through Europe, yet it is now an 
icon of nurturing tranquility. Humans have invented the small nomadic 
band and the continental megastate, and have demonstrated a 
flexibility whereby uprooted descendants of the former can function 
effectively in the latter. We lack the type of physiology or anatomy 
that in other mammals determine their mating system, and have come up 
with societies based on monogamy, polygyny, and polyandry. And we 
have fashioned some religions in which violent acts are the entrée to 
paradise and other religions in which the same acts consign one to 
hell. Is a world of peacefully coexisting human Forest Troops 
possible? Anyone who says, "No, it is beyond our nature," knows too 
little about primates, including ourselves.

[Footnote #1] Considerable sleuthing ultimately revealed that the 
disease had come from tainted meat in the garbage dump, which had 
been sold to the tourist lodge thanks to a corrupt meat inspector. 
The studies were the first of this kind of outbreak in a wild primate 
population and showed that, in contrast to what happens with humans 
and captive primates, there was little animal-to-animal transmission 
of the tuberculosis, and so the disease did not spread in Forest 
Troop beyond the garbage eaters.


www.foreignaffairs.org is copyright 2002--2006 by the Council on 
Foreign Relations. All rights reserved.


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