The Origins of War : A Global Archaeological Review.

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Human Nature-An Interdisciplinary Biosocial Perspective Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-12-06 DOI:10.1007/s12110-024-09477-3
Hugo Meijer
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Abstract

How old is war? Is it a deep-seated propensity in the human species or is it a recent cultural invention? This article investigates the archaeological evidence for prehistoric war across world regions by probing two competing hypotheses. The "deep roots" thesis asserts that war is an evolved adaptation that humans inherited from their common ancestor with chimpanzees, from which they split around seven million years ago, and that persisted throughout prehistory, encompassing both nomadic and sedentary hunter-gatherer societies. In contrast, the "shallow roots" viewpoint posits that peaceful intergroup relations are ancestral in humans, suggesting that war emerged only recently with the development of sedentary, hierarchical, and densely populated societies, prompted by the agricultural revolution ~ 12,000-10,000 years ago. To ascertain which position is best supported by the available empirical evidence, this article reviews the prehistoric archaeological record for both interpersonal and intergroup conflict across world regions, following an approximate chronological sequence from the emergence of humans in Africa to their dispersal out of Africa in the Near East, Europe, Australia, Northeast Asia, and the Americas. This worldwide analysis of the archaeological record lends partial support to both positions, but neither the "deep roots" nor the "shallow roots" argument is fully vindicated. Intergroup relations among prehistoric hunter-gatherers were marked neither by relentless war nor by unceasingly peaceful interactions. What emerges from the archaeological record is that, while lethal violence has deep roots in the Homo lineage, prehistoric group interactions-ranging from peaceful cooperation to conflict-exhibited considerable plasticity and variability, both over time and across world regions, which constitutes the true evolutionary puzzle.

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战争的起源:全球考古回顾。
战争有多古老?这是人类的一种根深蒂固的倾向,还是最近的文化发明?本文通过探究两种相互竞争的假设,调查了世界各地史前战争的考古证据。“深层根源”理论认为,战争是一种进化的适应,人类从他们与黑猩猩的共同祖先那里继承而来,他们在大约700万年前从黑猩猩中分离出来,并在整个史前时期持续存在,包括游牧和定居的狩猎采集社会。相比之下,“浅根”观点认为,和平的群体间关系在人类的祖先中就有了,这表明战争是最近才出现的,随着定居的、等级森严的、人口密集的社会的发展,这是由大约1.2万至1万年前的农业革命推动的。为了确定哪一种观点最能得到现有经验证据的支持,本文回顾了世界各地人际冲突和群体间冲突的史前考古记录,按照大致的时间顺序,从人类在非洲出现到他们从非洲扩散到近东、欧洲、澳大利亚、东北亚和美洲。这种对世界范围内考古记录的分析部分地支持了这两种观点,但无论是“深根”还是“浅根”的论点都没有得到充分证明。史前狩猎采集者的族群间关系既不以无情的战争为标志,也不以不断的和平互动为标志。从考古记录中可以看出,虽然致命的暴力在人类谱系中有着很深的根源,但史前群体的互动——从和平合作到冲突——在时间和世界各地都表现出相当大的可塑性和可变性,这构成了真正的进化之谜。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
8.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Human Nature is dedicated to advancing the interdisciplinary investigation of the biological, social, and environmental factors that underlie human behavior. It focuses primarily on the functional unity in which these factors are continuously and mutually interactive. These include the evolutionary, biological, and sociological processes as they interact with human social behavior; the biological and demographic consequences of human history; the cross-cultural, cross-species, and historical perspectives on human behavior; and the relevance of a biosocial perspective to scientific, social, and policy issues.
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