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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Sociobiology and conflict : evolutionary perspectives on competition, cooperation, violence, and warfare
Auflage
First edition
Ort / Verlag
London : Chapman & Hall,
Erscheinungsjahr
1990
Link zum Volltext
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
  • 1. Introduction -- One Conflict and Biology -- 2. Intergroup competition and conflict in animals and man -- 3. Selfish cooperation in social roles -- 4. The biological instability of social equilibria -- Two Sociobiology and Enmity -- 5. The cerebral bridge from family to foe -- 6. The evolutionary foundations of revolution -- 7. Loyalty and aggression in human groups -- 8. Territoriality and threat perceptions in urban humans -- Three ‘Primitive’ Warfare -- 9. Origin and evolution of ‘primitive’ warfare -- 10. The Inuit and the evolution of limited group conflict -- 11. Human nature and the function of war in social evolution -- 12. War and peace in primitive human societies -- 13. Primitive war and the Ethnological Inventory Project -- Four The Conflict about Sociobiology -- 14. The sociobiology of conflict and the conflict about sociobiology -- Author index.
  • 1. 1 THE STUDY OF CONFLICT Polemos Pantoon Pater Heraclitus Conflict on all levels of organic existence is pervasive, persistent, ubiquitous. Conflict is the universal experience of all life forms. Organisms are bound in multiple conflict-configurations and -coalitions, which have their own dynamic and their own logic. This does not mean, however, that the more paroxysmal forms of conflict behaviour, naked violence and destruction, are also universal. Conflict and cooperation are always intertwined. Conflicts do, however, have a propensity to gravitate towards violence. There is, as Pettman (1975) pointed out, no accepted or agreed list of the social units by which conflicts might be classified. To talk of conflict in intrapersonal, inter-personal, familial, group, class, ethnic, religious, intra-state or inter-state terms is to assume, perhaps erroneously, that 'each kind of social unit, having its own range of size, structure, and institutions, will also have its own modes of interaction and thus its own patterns of conflict with other social units' (Fink, 1968) like and unlike itself. Such an assumption merits scrutiny on its own, since, despite the plausibility of some sort of analytical link between the parties to a conflict and the nature of the confrontation that ensues, the link should be demonstrated and not allowed to stand by assertion alone. This volume is devoted to one type of analysis of conflict, the sociobiological one.
  • English
  • Description based on print version record.
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISBN: 94-009-1830-5
Titel-ID: 9925027732206463
Format
1 online resource (X, 338 p.)
Schlagworte
Interpersonal relations, Interpersonal conflict, Cooperativeness