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Human Aggression; Is It In The Genes?

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Human Aggression; Is It In The Genes? Honoring Father Theodore Hesburgh, President Emeritus University of Notre Dame James J. McKenna PhD Edmund P. Joyce C.S.C. Chair ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Human Aggression; Is It In The Genes?


1
Human Aggression Is It In The Genes?
  • Honoring Father Theodore Hesburgh, President
    Emeritus
  • University of Notre Dame
  • James J. McKenna PhD Edmund P. Joyce C.S.C. Chair
    in Anthropology
  • Director, Mother-Baby Behavioral Sleep Laboratory

2
Ethologist Konrad Lorenz wrote about human
aggression this way
  • An unprejudiced observer from another planet
    looking upon man as he is today, in his hand the
    atom bomb, a product of his intelligence, in his
    heart the aggressive drive inherited from his
    anthropoid ancestors which their same
    intelligence cannot control, would not predict
    long life for the species. (From On
    Aggression(1969)

3
Human Aggression Bio-Cultural Perspectives (is
it in the genes?)
  • The sordid history of mankind attests well to
    the fantastic plurality of stimuli that can be
    cooked up to elicit aggression. But how natural
    is it?
  • Ralph Holloway (1968)

4
Does an answer to this question matter?
  • YES! because of the danger of self-fulfilling
    prophecies

5
Recall that..
  • ..the behavior of men is not independent of the
    theories of human behavior that men adopt
  • Leon Eisenberg The Nature of Human Nature pg
    165 (1972)

6
Also,
  • Pessimism about man serves to maintain the
    status quo.
  • Leon Eisenberg pg. 167 1997 The Nature of Human
    Nature

7
is it in the genes? or environment? both/
neither?
  • recallfor complex organisms..like humans,
    genes produce potentiality--not certaintyof
    expression
  • aggression adaptive? some? measured?whether
    self-generated (by genes) or in response to
    experience, a rat fighting another rat on an
    electrified metal grill--to eliminate the
    pain..is adaptive, right?

8
What is Aggression?..we surely know it when we
see it
  • An animal acts aggressively when it inflicts,
    attempts to inflict, or threatens to inflict
    damage on another animal.The act is usually
    accompanied by recognizable behavioral symptoms
    and recognizable physiological changes.
  • Carthy and Ebling 1964

9
or..do we always know it when we see it ?
  • Perhaps amongst humans, aggression is not so
    easily defined, nor so immediately obvious..?
  • Socio-economic and political factors can be as
    injurious to physical and psycho-social health as
    violence can be to limbs and organs of the body

10
Consider the changes in levels of human
lethality--made possible by high tech culture..
Weapons that killmassively
  • the cultural evolution of cides..
  • from suicide.to
  • homicidetaking of anothers life, to
  • genocide.eliminating an entire group of people,
    to
  • ecocidekilling of an ecosystemto
  • omnicidekilling of everything or anything
    (D.BarashSociobiology and Behavior)

11
About HUMAN Aggression? What does Mel Gibsons
Brave Heart..teach us?
  • A rousing speech? exposure of genitals ..to an
    enemy ? What ? A war is scripted..follows some
    rules?
  • has social meaning ---full of symbols..and ritual
    as the motivating factors
  • dress up for war? flags? pageantry? WHAT?
  • fighting for food, protection or..an idea or
    value (Scotland and freedom)?
  • technologically-based? Always fatal?

12
Anthropology a holistic understanding (four
lines of evidence)
Developmental (socialization)
Cross-cultural (definitions are value driven)
Aggression
Evolutionary
human
abuse and neglect
origins? functons? selective conditions?
Cross-species
13
heterogeneity of aggressionit is not a coherent
or uniform behavior and it has many causes
Intra-specific Aggression vs. Inter-specific
Aggression
Predatory behavior
Protection from predators defense of young
defensive of territory
within species- within group competition for food
, resources, mates, allies, status
aggression associated with niche partitioning
protective responses
14
Sociobiological View of Aggression? D.Barash
  • Rather than consider human beings to be either
    innately aggressive or innately non-aggressive,a
    socio-biological view suggests that we have been
    selected to behave aggressively under some
    conditions and non-aggressively under others,
    depending upon the consequences of such
    aggressiveness or non-agressiveness for our
    evolutionary successAggressive behavior that is
    adaptive behavior under one condition may be mal
    adaptive under others

15
Animal Aggression vs..human aggression controlled
by?
  • Dominance or social hierarchies .the baboons
    policeman is his own biology?
  • Social institutionssocial values.. i.e.ethical
    judgments enforced by laws, police, jails,
    prisons, courtsa uniquely human response
  • humans substitute cultural rules for biological
    imperatives

16
setting up the issue.a little history
17
Any evidence?For Evolutionary Antecedents?
  • Primate wide-trends of affiliation and social
    cooperation (Sussman, Garber and
    Cheverud)

18
A major basis of maternal-infant attachment is
contact-comfort (rather than satiation)Harry
Harlow
Attachment Unfolding, discriminating bond
between parent and infant genetically-based..
Immediate survival and protection from predators
is main outcome
19
Maternal behavior among primates extends
throughout an extremely long infant and juvenile
period, with prolonged periods of physical
contact.
Orang-Utan
20
repair the damage caused by conflict? or
protecting cooperation and affiliative
relationships?
21
Cooperation or Aggression in Human Evolution? It
all began 3-4 million years agoThe Hominine
Niche
  • Emergence of empathy..mind reading..Food
    sharing/bipedalism, infant vulnerability
  • Tool use dependence, knowledge, skills,
    communication skills (verbal,non verbal)
  • Daddy transport and care (Gettler 2009 omnivory,
    reduced gut mass
  • Lack of clear material record for substantial
    division of labor until
  • recently! (loss of estrous,too)
  • Importance of social knowedge

22
What is unique (and scary) about human
aggression?
  • that the technology of violence makes it so easy
    to be so massively lethal--and deadly, and
    removed physically and psychologically from the
    violent act--from the appeasement and
    subordination of the victim
  • capacity to hate and de-humanize the
    enemy--without knowing who the enemy actually is,
    personally
  • and to objectify and to make abstractions out of
    the enemywhich makes violence easy and
    justified.

23
Process of Enemy Formation Its Universal
  • First, de-humanize by depicting them
    graphically/artistically as sub-human, without
    human emotions an sensitivities like insects,
    snakes, varmin
  • depict as vermin, vile, dangerous and
    threatening..
  • Use familiar, revered symbols and icons to depict
    their potential for inhumane acts..
  • Unite population over perceived threat--the
    importance of acting together (socially marks own
    cultural and ethnic group)
  • Learn to think of the enemy as an abstraction,
    not persons..

24
Where Aggression Comes From Developmental
Factors
  • Socio-cultural values intrinsic to the home and
    local culture?
  • Semai vs. Yanomamo peoples
  • familial-parental reinforcement-socialization..sex
    role modeling etc etc.
  • Infant-child relational experiences (affection,
    love, acquiring and being given self-worth,
    breast feeding, affectionate contact (high and
    low contact..emergence of empathy, attunement,
    conscience)

25
From D. Fry, (35 societies in the Standard
Cross-Cultural Sample )
Variable Simple Hunter-Gatherers Complex
Hunter-Gatherers
Primary food Terrestrial game Marine resources
or plants Food storage Very rare Typical Mobi
lity Nomadic or Semi-nomadic Settled or mostly
settled Population Low population
densities Higher population densities Political
system Egalitarian Hierarchical with
classes based on wealth or
heredity Social structure Absence of social
segments Lineages in some cases Slavery Absen
t Frequent Competition Discouraged Encouraged
Warfare Rare Variable/Common
26
Specific Developmental Ideas About Origins
  • Frustration-aggression hypothesis (continuous
    thwarting of ones goals leads to violence,
    Dollard et.al
  • family abuse and neglect including sexual and
    physical violence
  • male sexual jealousy and envy
  • learn to fight by fighting, learn to win by
    winning (rat studies)
  • fighting in response to pain..

27
Child abuse is passed from one generation to
another..learned!!
28
Material envy ?
Human beings are unique among primates, however,
in that we experience prolonged material
ownership. This custom creates long lasting
grudges and persistent personal violence.
(Barash 1987)
29
the negative side of moral beliefs and ideologies
  • Humans are alone in our will, desire and
    capability to force another culture to convert to
    a different practicereligious or political?

30
Proximate Causes/Motivations Likewise Are
Heterogeneous
  • Pain-induced..(tumor on amygdala)
  • Parental (protective) aggression
  • Kin-based aggression
  • Hypoglycemic responses
  • Hunger-induced, chemical imbalance
  • There appears no singular motivation, hence, no
    singular gene
  • underlying each kind of aggressive act

31
What does it mean to say that aggression is
actually based on genes
  • how and why can aggression actually evolve
  • Answer it must increase the reproductive success
    of the actor

32
An Evolutionary Point of View Lorenz
  • Proposes an independent appetitive drive--to be
    aggressive i.e. the spontaneity of aggression
    hypothesis..
  • argues for the inherent adaptive value of an
    aggressive drive ...defend territory, protect
    resources, increase access to mates (status)..
  • underlies human cultural life..can be re-directed
    by international sports events

33
Lorenz and the Hydraulic Model of Aggression
  • An unlearned need to release energy in the form
    of aggression, in some form, expressed either
    directly, or through vicarious participation in
    ceremonies and/or sport rituals
  • The longer the interval between the consumatory
    aggressive act .. the lower the stimuli
    threshold becomes needed to set off the
    behavior...and the more likely will the person
    actively seek out the releasing stimuli to
    restore balance i.e. the hydraulic aspect

34
a universal independent motivation for
aggression ?
  • about which Robert Hinde writes
  • .ethologists need not fabricate a general model
    of drive, but rather what is needed is to
    document individual cases and variability as to
    how and under what circumstances different types
    of aggression occur.

35
Ethologists such as Lorenz, Tinbergen,
Eibl-Eibesfeldt...
  • studied fighting fish, gamecocks, bull fights,
    cichlids, geese, ducks.not primates
  • adopted a mechanistic-gene based view of
    aggression..less mutable and organized around
    reproductive fitness modelsdrives/strategies
    (primary and otherwise)

36
Contemporary Views of Aggression
  • more holistic and transactional in theory and
    explanationboth proximate and ultimate
    explanations---
  • acknowledges underlying physiology, hormonal
    status (prolactins, androgens, testosterone,
    estrogens, neuro-transmitters (seratonin) affect
    excitability and mood in generalwithout defining
    what behavior will be expressed..
  • The role of experience and socialization..enemy
    formation models

37
role of the cortex (discriminating-evaluating)
part of brain ?
  • does the biology of aggression accommodate ? or
    cause ? the aggression?

38
Does Affection and Touch In Infancy Reduce Adult
Aggression?
  • Dr. James H. Prescott (developmental
    neuropsychologist)
  • Principle cause of human violence stems from a
    lack of bodily pleasure
  • I am convinced that various abnormal social and
    emotional behaviors resulting from what
    psychologists call maternal deprivation, that
    is, a lack of tender, loving care, are caused by
    a unique type of sensory deprivation,
    somato-sensory deprivation (sensations of touch
    and body movement, especially)

39
Lets examineanthropologically
  • western infant care practices in relationship to
    human infant needs and conditions..is there a
    mismatch ? Do we promote empathy..through
    closeness

40
Contemporary Views of Aggression and Warfare
  • models recognize huge differences between
    institutional, state, and nationally-sponsored or
    sanctioned aggression, from forms of aggression
    committed by individuals..
  • explanations of forms of more global human
    aggression tend to separate these defined
    nationalistic/political/religious motivations
    (especially nation/state warfare) avoid
    biological explanations...

41
The Good News
  • Human beings have a tremendous capacity to
    identify with the other
  • To transcend sense of danger for ones self in
    the sight of another in peril..to lose ones self
    completely and become the other..
  • The hero/heroine loses his or herself for the
    sake of others...

42
Why Do Such Relatively Tiny Numbers of
Aggressive Acts Seem So Huge and Overwhelming?
  • Because peacefulness and positive interactions
    and social cohesiveness are so critically valued
    universally and important to reproductive
    success
  • Because It is not as important to notice the
    billions upon billions of daily proactive acts of
    sacrifice, kindness and positive social behaviors
    and interactions---it is expected and normal..
  • It is precisely because our evolution including
    the emergence of cultural life depends on
    co-operation and social inter-dependence that it
    is the opposite --aggression--is which threatens
    co-operation.. is so unacceptableand why
    aggression is so salient!

43
Competition and Rivalry (YES)Hatred and Violence
(No)
  • there is a Lake in Massachusetts.. on the
    Connecticut border (named by the Mohegans..
  • Lake Charbunagungamaug..
  • You fish on your side, I fish on my side, nobody
    fish in the middle, no trouble.. David Barash
    story..(1987)

44
Another Way To View..On Aggression
  • We are threatened more by the genetic traits we
    lack than by those we possess
  • We lack genetically mediated killing inhibitions
    because natural selection did not have much
    reason to endow us with any Barash (1987)

45
Love actually is..all around
46
Human Aggression Is It In The Genes?
  • Honoring Father Theodore Hesburgh, President
    Emeritus
  • University of Notre Dame
  • James J. McKenna PhD Edmund P. Joyce C.S.C.
    Endowed Chair in Anthropology
  • Director, Mother-Baby Behavioral Sleep Laboratory
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