Perceptions of War in a Darwinian Perspective

Representations of war cannot be separated from moral perceptions of human conflicts. Whether war is deemed a normal phenomenon for human nature ‒ “wars have always existed and will always take place” ‒ or on the contrary is regarded as the unleashing of outrageous atrocities that could be avoided,...

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Main Author: Michel Prum
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Rennes 2022-06-01
Series:Revue LISA
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/14319
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author Michel Prum
author_facet Michel Prum
author_sort Michel Prum
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description Representations of war cannot be separated from moral perceptions of human conflicts. Whether war is deemed a normal phenomenon for human nature ‒ “wars have always existed and will always take place” ‒ or on the contrary is regarded as the unleashing of outrageous atrocities that could be avoided, has implications on how conflicts are remembered and commemorated. After the epoch-making publication of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species (1859), and the consequential flood of ill-advised books and articles which constructed what has been termed “social Darwinism”, war was perceived as the legitimate manifestation of “the survival of the fittest” both for nations and individuals. The reason for wars could be found in evolutionary biology (Crook, 1994). Yet other writers chose to read peace into Darwin’s writings, and pointed to the notions of solidarity and philanthropy present in such publications as Descent of Man (1871). Reassessing Darwinism on the basis of the “reversionary effect of evolution” (Tort, 1983) leads to delegitimizing war time violence through the deconstruction of socio-biological arguments and gives a case for such anti-warmongering war memorials as Gentioux-Pigerolles in France which reads ‘Cursed be War!’
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spelling doaj-art-7cbd2ffcfcea45e29683ac929eb3a5ed2025-01-06T09:03:04ZengPresses universitaires de RennesRevue LISA1762-61532022-06-012010.4000/lisa.14319Perceptions of War in a Darwinian PerspectiveMichel PrumRepresentations of war cannot be separated from moral perceptions of human conflicts. Whether war is deemed a normal phenomenon for human nature ‒ “wars have always existed and will always take place” ‒ or on the contrary is regarded as the unleashing of outrageous atrocities that could be avoided, has implications on how conflicts are remembered and commemorated. After the epoch-making publication of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species (1859), and the consequential flood of ill-advised books and articles which constructed what has been termed “social Darwinism”, war was perceived as the legitimate manifestation of “the survival of the fittest” both for nations and individuals. The reason for wars could be found in evolutionary biology (Crook, 1994). Yet other writers chose to read peace into Darwin’s writings, and pointed to the notions of solidarity and philanthropy present in such publications as Descent of Man (1871). Reassessing Darwinism on the basis of the “reversionary effect of evolution” (Tort, 1983) leads to delegitimizing war time violence through the deconstruction of socio-biological arguments and gives a case for such anti-warmongering war memorials as Gentioux-Pigerolles in France which reads ‘Cursed be War!’https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/14319evolutionwarviolenceDarwin Charlessurvival of the fittestTort Patrick
spellingShingle Michel Prum
Perceptions of War in a Darwinian Perspective
Revue LISA
evolution
war
violence
Darwin Charles
survival of the fittest
Tort Patrick
title Perceptions of War in a Darwinian Perspective
title_full Perceptions of War in a Darwinian Perspective
title_fullStr Perceptions of War in a Darwinian Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Perceptions of War in a Darwinian Perspective
title_short Perceptions of War in a Darwinian Perspective
title_sort perceptions of war in a darwinian perspective
topic evolution
war
violence
Darwin Charles
survival of the fittest
Tort Patrick
url https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/14319
work_keys_str_mv AT michelprum perceptionsofwarinadarwinianperspective