Terrorism as Coalitional Predation: Explaining Definitional Ambiguities and Precautionary Responses.

IF 1.1 4区 心理学 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL Evolutionary Psychology Pub Date : 2024-04-01 DOI:10.1177/14747049241263995
Michael Moncrieff
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Abstract

Terrorism continues to be an enigmatic and contested concept, lacking a universally accepted definition despite extensive scholarly debate. Lay intuitions, however, demonstrate a notable convergence in identifying acts as "terrorism" when specific situational features are present, such as indiscriminate violence and out-group perpetration. These features elicit predictable and robust precautionary responses, raising the question: Is there a unified and parsimonious explanation for these phenomena? It is hypothesized that a situational template exists in the human mind, the coalitional predation template (CPT), which evolved not to detect modern-day terrorism, per se, but to identify and respond to situations of predatory coalitional conflict. The paper examines the potential cues and mechanisms that constitute the psychological systems activated by such threats, suggesting that matching the input cues of the CPT triggers well-documented precautionary responses to terrorism. However, this cue-based system may not align neatly with contemporary threats, leading to disproportionate responses to some threats while underestimating others. The model also posits that interpretations of violence can vary due to incomplete cues and the social position of the evaluator, leading to public disagreements and inconsistencies in defining terrorism. Consequently, arriving at an unambiguous and widely accepted definition of terrorism may not be possible. The model presented may account for a range of phenomena, including the inclination towards attributing mental illness to particular violent incidents and the uncanny surface similarities between terrorism and war crimes. The findings have significant implications for both the theoretical understanding of terrorism and practical policy responses.

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作为联盟掠夺的恐怖主义:解释定义的模糊性和预防性反应。
恐怖主义仍然是一个神秘而有争议的概念,尽管学者们进行了广泛的辩论,但仍缺乏一个普遍接受的定义。然而,外行人的直觉表明,当出现特定的情境特征(如不分青红皂白的暴力和外群体犯罪)时,将行为认定为 "恐怖主义 "的观点明显趋同。这些特征引起了可预测的、强有力的预防性反应,从而提出了一个问题:这些现象是否有统一而简洁的解释?本文假设人类头脑中存在一种情境模板,即联盟掠夺模板(CPT),它的进化不是为了侦测现代恐怖主义本身,而是为了识别和应对掠夺性联盟冲突的情境。本文研究了构成被此类威胁激活的心理系统的潜在线索和机制,认为与联合捕食模板的输入线索相匹配,会触发有据可查的针对恐怖主义的预防性反应。然而,这种基于线索的系统可能与当代威胁并不完全一致,从而导致对某些威胁做出不相称的反应,同时低估了其他威胁。该模型还假定,由于线索不完整和评估者的社会地位不同,对暴力的解释也会不同,从而导致公众对恐怖主义定义的分歧和不一致。因此,可能无法对恐怖主义做出一个明确且广为接受的定义。所提出的模型可以解释一系列现象,包括将精神疾病归因于特定暴力事件的倾向,以及恐怖主义与战争罪行之间不可思议的表面相似性。研究结果对恐怖主义的理论认识和实际政策应对都具有重要意义。
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来源期刊
Evolutionary Psychology
Evolutionary Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL-
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
6.70%
发文量
22
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Evolutionary Psychology is an open-access peer-reviewed journal that aims to foster communication between experimental and theoretical work on the one hand and historical, conceptual and interdisciplinary writings across the whole range of the biological and human sciences on the other.
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