The title to
an article in The Atlantic:
A Bold New Theory Proposes That Humans Tamed Themselves
A leading anthropologist suggests that protohumans became domesticated by killing off violent males.
A few key paragraphs from it:
In fact, Wrangham’s notion
of human evolution powered by self-domestication has an ancient
lineage: The basic idea was first proposed by a disciple of Aristotle’s
named Theophrastus and has been debated several times since the 18th
century. This latest version, too, is bound to provoke controversy, but
that’s what bold theorizing is supposed to do. And Wrangham is nothing
if not bold as he puts the paradox in his title to use. In his telling,
the dark side of protohuman nature was enlisted in the evolution of
communal harmony.
Central to his argument is the idea that
cooperative killing of incurably violent individuals played a central
role in our self-domestication. Much as the Russian scientists
eliminated the fierce fox pups from the breeding pool, our ancestors
killed men who were guilty of repeated acts of violence. Certainly
all-male raiding parties have operated in some groups of humans, seeking
out and killing victims in neighboring villages (which recalls the
patrolling chimps that Wrangham reported on earlier in his career). The
twist in his current theory is that such ambushes are turned inward, to
protect the group from one of its own: They serve as a form of capital
punishment. Wrangham cites a number of examples of anthropologists
witnessing a group of men collaborating to kill a violent man in their
midst.
The idea is intriguing, and it is indeed true that human
hunter-gatherers, whose societies exist without governments, sometimes
collectively eliminate bad actors. But such actions are rare, as the
Canadian anthropologist Richard Lee emphasized in his extensive studies
of the !Kung, which include the report of an unusual case: After a
certain man killed at least two people, several other men ambushed and
killed him. My own two years with the !Kung point to a more robust
possible selection process for winnowing out aggression: female choice.
Women in most hunter-gatherer groups, as I learned in the course of my
experience in the field, are closer to equality with men than are women
in many other societies. Evolutionary logic suggests that young women
and their parents, in choosing less violent mates through the
generations, could provide steady selection pressure toward lower
reactive aggression—steadier pressure than infrequent dramas of capital
punishment could. (Female bonobo coalitions would seem primed to serve a
similar taming function.)
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