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Old 11-13-2011, 01:44 PM
 
6,940 posts, read 9,677,788 times
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Steven pinker says the world is less violent now. I agree with him. Mankind was more violent in its primitive days.


Steven Pinker on The Decline of Violence & "The Better Angels of Our Nature" - YouTube

Quote:
You are less likely to die a violent death today than at any other time in human history. In fact, violence has been on a steady decline for centuries now. That's the arresting claim made by Harvard University cognitive neuroscientist Steven Pinker in his new book, The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined.

Just a couple of centuries ago, violence was pervasive. Slavery was widespread; wife and child beating an acceptable practice; heretics and witches burned at the stake; pogroms and race riots common, and warfare nearly constant. Public hangings, bear-baiting, and even cat burning were popular forms of entertainment. By examining collections of ancient skeletons and scrutinizing current day tribal societies, anthropologists have found that people were nine times more likely to be killed in tribal warfare than to die of war and genocide in even the war-torn 20th century. The murder rate in medieval Europe was 30 times higher than today.

What happened? Human nature did not change, but our institutions did, encouraging people to restrain their natural tendencies toward violence. Over the course of more than 850 pages of data and analysis, Pinker identifies a series of institutional changes that have led to decreasing levels of life-threatening violence. The rise of states 5,000 years ago dramatically reduced tribal conflict. In recent centuries, the spread of courtly manners, literacy, commerce, and democracy have reduced violence even more. Polite behavior requires self-restraint; literacy encourages empathy; commerce switches encounters from zero-sum to positive-sum gains; and democracy restrains the excesses of government.

Pinker dropped by Reason's Washington, D.C., office to talk with Science Correspondent Ronald Bailey about ideology, empathy, and why you're much less likely to get knifed in the face these days.
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Old 11-13-2011, 01:49 PM
 
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Overall, yes. We have a long way to go, though.
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Old 11-13-2011, 05:53 PM
 
6,940 posts, read 9,677,788 times
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Originally Posted by nightflight View Post
Overall, yes. We have a long way to go, though.
The 20th century had tons of genocides and massacres.
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Old 11-13-2011, 06:56 PM
 
Location: Old Bellevue, WA
18,782 posts, read 17,356,787 times
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pct of world population murdered by government:

13th century 8.9
17th 4.7
19th 3.7
20th 7.3

Source: Gerald Scully, "Murder by the State," National Center for Policy Analysis
http://www.ncpa.org/pdfs/st211.pdf

In other words, the rate nearly doubled from the 19th to 20th century. Almost all collectivist ideology, which at the beginning of the 21st century reigns supreme as never before.
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