48 | Is War Natural After All? ~ Luke Glowacki
Description
Our ancestors did not wage war. Warfare emerged only when humans started settling down and storing food. Indeed, some modern hunter-gatherers still enjoy the peaceful existence that once was the natural state of our species.
Or so argued Douglas P. Fry, my guest in episode 8. I found many of his arguments convincing. For example, ancient cave art is surprisingly void of depictions of warfare. You can hear many more of his arguments in that episode, titled "Is War Natural For Humans?"
But not all scholars agree. Far from it. And I owe a voice to the other side of the debate. So here is an episode with one of the most thoughtful voices arguing for a deeper origins of war.
Luke Glowacki is a professor of anthropology at Boston University, where teaches courses on the evolution of war. And he believes that war has very ancient origins, indeed.
We had a very stimulating conversation, discussing topics such as:
(03:00 ) The debate: What can we all agree on? And what are the disagreements?
(12:10 ) Hunter-gatherers: Are they peaceful? And are they any good as models of the past?
(25:55 ) Archaeology: Cave paintings and broken bones
(34:55 ) Primatology: Chimpanzees and bonobos
(46:40 ) Implications: What can we learn from all this?
As always, we finish with my guest's reflections on humanity.
LINKS
Head here for links to relevant academic articles -- and the video of the chimpanzee raid!
You can read my essays and get the On Humans newsletter at OnHumans.Substack.com.
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Email: makela dot ilari at outlook dot com
MENTIONS
Scholars
Douglas P. Fry (ep. #8) | R. Brian Ferguson #25 | Richard Wrangham #21 | Cecilia Padilla-Iglesias #39 | Jane Goodall | Manvir Singh | David Kang #49 (upcoming)
Keywords
Evolution | Archaeology | Anthropology | Primatology | Peace | Warfare | Social science of war | International relations | Biological anthropology | Cultural anthropology | Hunter-gatherers | Cave painting | Prehistory | Prehistoric violence | Prehistoric war