ABSTRACT

For millennia humanity has simultaneously deplored and waged war. With each conflict the stakes have risen, and we now face global annihilation for the sake of a practice all the world claims to condemn. Is there some seemingly irresistible force that impels us toward our own destruction?

To explain this central paradox of human behaviour, Genetic Seeds of Warfare, originally published in 1989, advances a startling new theory. It traces the origins of warfare back to early groups of Homo sapiens in competition for scarce resources, showing that warfare evolved as these groups evolved: kin-group against kin-group; tribe against tribe; nation against nation. Rather than being tied to a specific gene, warfare emerged as one of many behavioural strategies for maximising genetic survival. As social groups became more complex, motivations for warfare developed from simple protection of blood relations to political appeals to shared ethnicity, religion, and national identity. But the ultimate cause of warfare is rooted in the most basic of human drives: the need to ensure that one’s genes will survive and reproduce.

The authors challenge many assumptions about human behaviour in general, and warfare in particular. They convincingly present the case for an evolutionary understanding of the propensity for warfare, supporting their argument with data from a vast array of social and natural science research. In doing so, they reveal why previous attempts at ending war have failed, and make proactive suggestions toward the development of a new agenda for world peace.

chapter Chapter 1|20 pages

Why This Study Matters

part I|42 pages

Ultimate Evolutionary Strategies

chapter Chapter 2|20 pages

Inclusive Fitness and In-Group Amity

chapter Chapter 3|20 pages

Groups as Forces of Selection and Out-Group Enmity

part II|52 pages

Emergent Psychological Strategies

chapter Chapter 4|26 pages

Epigenesis and Channeled Cognition

chapter Chapter 5|24 pages

The Identification Mechanism — the Critical Linkage

part III|56 pages

Reinterpreting the Empirical Record

chapter Chapter 6|20 pages

African Coups d’État

chapter Chapter 7|34 pages

Nationalism and Patriotism

Nationalism : An Ancient Answer to a Modern Challenge

part IV|40 pages

Mobilizing for Action

chapter Chapter 8|22 pages

On Biases, Blinders, and Dead Ends

chapter Chapter 9|16 pages

The Policy Frontier

Does Peace Have a Chance?