Chapter 10. (continued)
So,
is war inevitable? Again, the evidence of history seems to answer with a firm yes.
Wars are fought over these very differences. Following this line of argument,
we see what Hitler thought of as his great insight: he accepted that war was an
inevitable, periodic test of the cultural and, he said, racial vitality of a
people. He held to and ranted over his worldview to his last hour. To
geneticists, his racial theories are meaningless silliness. Humans are all one
species. But when his worldview is extended to an analysis of cultural groupings
of humans (e.g. tribes and nations) and the conflicts that arise among them, it
becomes more disturbing.
Ruins of Dresden, 1945.
The
ancient Greeks had two words for humans: Hellenes
(themselves) and barbarians (everyone
else). Similar in view and vocabulary are the Chinese. To many Chinese in
China, I would be gwai lo, an evil
alien. The word Masai—a famous
African tribe’s name for themselves—means people,
as do the words Innu, in Innu, and Cheyenne, in Cheyenne. For hundreds of
years, Europeans divided the members of the species homo sapiens into Christians and heathens. The Muslims speak of the
faithful and the infidel. In Japan, for centuries, all humans were either
Japanese or gaijin. Jews were not
Gentiles. Tutsis were not Hutus. In other words, people in all these cultures
and most others that have ever existed have believed that they are—or were, in
the cases of those now vanished into history—the only fully human humans. Thus
war has always occurred with discouraging regularity.
The
evidence mounts on all sides against the hopes of those who love peace. People
find it easy, even moral, to attack, subdue, assimilate, and sometimes even
exterminate other humans whom they regard as members of an inferior subspecies.
By this reasoning, Hitler was only exhorting the Germans to accept the
inevitability of war and get to work at being winners.
Under
this reasoning, war is the way by which we have, through the sociocultural mode
of evolution, become our own predators. We cut out the ineffective parts of our
species’ total concepts-values-behaviors pool (its meme pool, rather than its gene pool) by war. Wars primarily kill
the young and fit, the prime breeding stock. And modern wars kill much of the healthiest,
smartest breeding stock on both sides. Wars don’t serve a genetic mode of
evolution anymore, if they ever did. They haven’t, arguably, since the first
technological war—that is, the US Civil War. In modern wars, too many young men
die and too much prime breeding stock is lost. But wars do still serve a
cultural mode of evolution.
For
thousands of years, we have evolved culturally by this ugly means. For
centuries, no other species and no change in our environment has been able to
shake us. Paradoxically, we save individuals born with genetically transmitted
defects that in any other species’ environment would be fatal every time, and
these individuals go on to reproduce. We aren’t evolving genetically anymore;
if anything, we’re likely devolving. But we are evolving in a cultural-behavioral
way.
We
prey on ourselves, not eating corpses, but killing followers of other cultures
in order to cut out parts of our species’ total values/memes pool whose
usefulness is fading. This system has worked brutally, but efficiently, for a
long time. Evidence that it works lies, for example, in the way that within a
generation of being conquered, most of the people subjugated under the Romans
were effectively “Romanized.” Rome was a more vigorous and efficient culture
than were any of those it conquered—a vigorous, efficient, aggressive culture that
swallowed up its neighbors, their territories, peoples, and ways of life.
Parallel cases abound in the history books. For centuries, war worked.
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