Why violence?
Expanding on arguments first proposed by psychologist Roy
Baumeister, research fellow Taje Rai presents some compelling thoughts about violence.
Noting our propensity to denounce violent acts as sadistic, psychopathic and evil, he agrees with Baumeister’s objection, to the effect that we simplify
when we say that violent actions are immoral or evil:
In his
book Evil: Inside Human Violence and Cruelty (1999), the psychologist Roy
Baumeister argues that people believe most
perpetrators of violence to be sadists who gain pleasure from the suffering of
innocent victims. Especially for the most heinous crimes, we can’t help but see
the perpetrators as ‘bad’ people: inhuman monsters who lack basic moral
feeling. Baumeister called this phenomenon ‘the myth of pure evil’. A myth
because it isn’t true.
In
spite of widespread beliefs about its existence, sadism is so rare that it is
not even an official psychiatric diagnosis. Its closest relative is
psychopathy, but psychopathy is not characterised by malevolent joy at the
suffering of others. Admittedly, psychopaths lack moral emotions and empathy
toward victims. And they can be quite violent: in large-scale studies of
criminal offenders, it has been found that around 10 per cent of violent
crimes are committed by those who score above the cut-off for psychopathy,
whereas such people make up less than 1 per cent of the general population
worldwide. Clearly, psychopaths account for more than their fair share of harm.
Some criminals commit violent acts because they lack moral
feeling or because they gain a sadistic delight from watching others suffer. But,
most do not. Sadists and psychopaths enjoy such spectacles but the world contains far fewer of them than we think.
Researchers have offered two theories about why people
commit acts of violence.
The first says that we are all prone to commit violent
actions, but that most of us successfully repress our impulses. Under the right
set of circumstances we can overcome our inhibitions and become violent
monsters.
This says that we all have a capacity to commit violent
acts. One would be hard-put to disagree.
But, that does not mean that we are prone to do so or that
we spend our mental energy trying to prevent ourselves from acting on this
potential. As sometimes happens, this theory confuses a potential with a desire. We all have the potential to cannibalize our neighbor,
but, under any but the most extreme circumstances we have no real inclination
or wish to do so.
Another theory suggests that people commit violence when it
provides them certain benefits, and when the risk of capture is tolerable:
On this
view, violence is just a way to achieve instrumental goals. For example,
killing rival heirs is sometimes a good idea if you want to be king. Whether
it’s fighting among brothers or between nations, these rational-choice models
predict that the likelihood of violence increases when its benefits go up or
its costs go down.
This makes sense, and yet, it does not explain the
wastefulness of some violent behavior:
But
once again, we find ourselves with a puzzle. People frequently resort to
violence when, by any measure of practical utility, non-violent means would be
more effective. As Baumeister and colleagues noted in the paper ‘Relation of
Threatened Egotism to Violence and Aggression’ (1996): Wars harm both sides, most crimes yield little financial gain, terrorism and
assassination almost never bring about the desired political changes, most
rapes fail to bring sexual pleasure, torture rarely elicits accurate or useful
information…
Among the most horrific instances of violence for the sake
of destruction was the trench warfare of World War I. Can anyone say that the
carnage of that war served any real purpose?
Still, this deserves some questioning. Some
people commit horrific acts of violence because they want to deter others from
attacking them. You are less likely to attack someone who is notably brutal. If your enemy convince you that he will never surrender, the cost of the engagement becomes very high indeed.
Some people commit acts of horrific violence because they
want to show that they possess superhuman powers. People who have lost out in
competition and who reject the idea of working to improve their standing might
very well resent the outcome. They might want to show how strong they are by
participating in actions that are beyond the human pale.
Faced with the choice between anonymity and infamy, they
choose the latter.
Also, some nations might be practicing human potlatch. They
might be willing to sacrifice an inordinate number of young males because this
signifies their strength.
Be that as it may, Rai offers his own theory. He suggests
that many of those who engage in violence do so for good moral reasons. They are
violent because they believe that it’s the right thing to do. In some ways this
correlates well with the theory where violence is a rational action, designed to
gain an advantage. It merits attention:
Across
practices, across cultures, and throughout historical periods, when people
support and engage in violence, their primary motivations are moral. By ‘moral’, I mean that people
are violent because they feel they must be; because they feel that their
violence is obligatory. They know that they are harming fully human beings.
Nonetheless, they believe they should.
Violence does not stem from a psychopathic lack of morality. Quite the reverse:
it comes from the exercise of perceived moral rights and obligations.
People commit acts of violence, against their parents, their
children, their spouses and their neighbors because they believe that they are
morally obligated to do so.
Rai provides some examples:
A
mother in the American South beats her child because he disobeyed her
authority, to protect him from himself, and to ensure that he becomes a responsible
adult. Drill sergeants, gang leaders and guerrilla fighters brutally ‘beat in’
new recruits to create lifelong bonds with their compatriots and unflinching
obedience to their superiors, both of which are fundamental to success in
battle. A father in Papua New Guinea pours hot fat down the inner arm of his
son and hopes he will endure it stoically because this is critical if he is to
become a respected adult in the community. A boy gets into a fight because the
other boy hit him first, and his father taught him that he must defend himself
and never allow himself to be bullied; when the boy becomes a man, he gets into
a bar fight because someone insulted his girlfriend and he must defend her
honour.
He continues to suggest that moral behavior is designed to
affirm and to regulate social ties:
At the
same time, if violence is motivated by moral sentiments, what is it motivated toward? What are these perpetrators
trying to achieve? The general pattern we found was that the violence was
intended to regulate social
relationships.
Also:
In the
examples above, parents are relating with children; recruits and fighters are
relating with peers and superiors; boys and men are relating with their
friends; families are relating with their communities; men are relating with
women; people are relating to gods; and groups and nations are relating to each
other. Across all cases, perpetrators are using violence to create, conduct,
sustain, enhance, transform, honour, protect, redress, repair, end, and mourn
valued relationships.
Individuals
and cultures certainly vary in the ways they do this and the contexts in which
they think violence is an acceptable means of making things right, but the goal
is the same. The purpose of violence is to sustain a moral order.
Human beings are wired to function within an orderly
society. If that requires them to commit acts of violence they feel duty-bound
to do so. No one questions the right to use violence in self-defense. No one
questions the rightness of using violence to defend a nation against invasion.
But, some people also see the use of violence as intrinsic
to their cultural identity. You cannot be a member in good standing of some
cultures if refuse to kill your daughter for wearing a short skirt. Here your
violent action affirms your commitment to the culture and the intensity of your
belief. Willingness to practice human sacrifice is taken as a sign of
conviction.
It seems roughly to correspond to the situation where an
undercover policeman is asked to commit a murder because otherwise how can his
new associates know for certain that he is not an undercover policeman.
Of course, different cultures have different laws. The
Bible, in both old and new testaments, tells people love their neighbors and to
open their arms to strangers. In that way, it attempts to preclude the use of
violence as a sign of membership in a religious community.
Rai adds that is some cultures violence and suffering are
considered to be morally cleansing.
He argues that it all depends on how much value we place on
happiness:
There
have been many cultures and historical periods where people did not
particularly value happiness, or where they actively sought out suffering
because they saw it as morally cleansing. Late 16th- and early 17th-century
Protestant religious manuals instructed readers that pain was a moral good to
be pursued and delighted in. Public executions have often been popular spectacles,
with families picnicking at hangings throughout the 18th and 19th centuries.
Finally, Rai envisions a future without violence:
It
isn’t easy to change a culture of violence. You have to give people the
structural, economic, technological and political means to regulate their
relationships peacefully. Social groups have to learn to shame and shun anyone
who hurts others. But it can be done. It has been done in the past, and it is
happening as we speak.
Cultures
do change. Globally, violence is on the decline. People everywhere are finding
ways to satisfy their moral motives and social-relational aims non-violently.
This does not mean our work is finished. People still hurt and kill one another
because they believe that it is the right thing to do. But if their primary
social groups make them feel that they should not be violent, they won’t be.
Once everyone, everywhere, truly believes that violence is wrong, it will end.
Clearly, this is optimistic. It is true that there is less
violence now than there used to be. It may be because there is more
international trade and commerce, more practice of what William James called
the moral equivalent of war.
And yet, people compete within cultures, for status and
prestige. And cultures compete with each other, for dominance. Markets have
winners and losers, some who have more and some who have less. Marketplace competition does not lead to equality. Why would there
not be a natural resentment among those who have lost out in competition? Why
would they not prefer to take what others have earned rather than to earn it
themselves?
10 comments:
Every time we eat, we are committing violence. Animals had to be killed, and their flesh is being torn to shreds by our teeth.
Every time we build a house, we are committing violence. We are taking a piece of nature and converting it to human habitat. And the walls are meant to keep nature out by force.
Every piece of law is inherently violent for it threatens violence for those who break the rules. If you don't pay taxes, men with guns will come and get you.
A lot of violence seems invisible to us because we don't do it to each other -- instead, we cooperate 'peacefully' to do it to others -- or because it's legalized or sublimated when we do it to each other.
We ignore all the violence we do to the animal and plant world. When we pull out tons of fish from the sea, it is violent, but we just see it as economic activity.
When men and women compete for better schools and jobs, they are fueled by aggression and domination, but we don't see it as violent since it's carried out under rule of law. But rule of law is only effective because there's the threat of violence against those who break the law.
Violence becomes visible to us when the objectives of some people become so much at odds with those of another people that it leads to something like open conflict or war.
I suspect that you are right about the origin of our capacity for violence. While Rai and the psychologists seem to want to limit themselves to more criminally violent actions, the fact that without violence we would be sorely lacking in protein seems to me to be essential.
We use violence when the person or creature we are taking something from resists, or we feel likely to resist.
re: Be that as it may, Rai offers his own theory. He suggests that many of those who engage in violence do so for good moral reasons. They are violent because they believe that it’s the right thing to do. In some ways this correlates well with the theory where violence is a rational action, designed to gain an advantage.
Its interesting to say "good moral reasons" since this also considers the possibility of "bad moral reasons", or is there such a thing?!
Is the "white race" in trouble? Do we need to kill black people to help start a race battle that will provoke the blacks to fight back so we can defend further controls on their behavior until we can make sure they're all dead or in prison or deported to their own ancestral lands somewhere else?
Whatever the answers it would seem the "moral mind" is a subjective one, and separates "good" from "bad", and when it can push "bad" onto an "outgroup", then it can project all its own self-hatred onto others, AND feel good about this, feel temporarily empowered and clear what needs to be done, however repulsive in the moment, not necessarily sadistically, but with moral clarity of every good "final solution" of evil in the world.
I think that recent paper on empathy and aggression applies. The hardest aggression to resist is the one where you're an agent protecting others like you who have been harmed by others not like you. Is there any limit to rationalizations in such scapegoat?
http://public.psych.iastate.edu/caa/classes/595Breadings/Buffone2014EmpathyGenesAggr.pdf
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Abstract - Can empathy for others motivate aggression on their behalf?
Implications for Real-World Aggression
Prior research only found empathy to predict aggression toward an anger-arousing wrongdoer such as a drunk driver who injured an empathy target.
In the real world, situations in which empathy works hand-in-hand with—and augments the effects of—anger in response to provocation are likely more common than empathy-linked aggression that is not fueled by angry affect.
...
Batson and colleagues have previously suggested that people may sometimes be more motivated to aggress on behalf of others than on behalf of themselves. This effect may in fact be a result of empathy and may manifest in real-world phenomena ranging from playground fights to large-scale aggression. Concern over the distress and suffering of loved ones and other ingroup members may augment the desire to aggress seen in terrorists, gang members, and others
...
Just as the self-esteem movement was not a panacea leading to happy, successful, and well-adapted children, oxytocin and/or empathy interventions may not stop problems such as bullying and other forms of aggression and violence, because aggression itself may result from empathy. Whether empathy is gentle or fierce depends very much on for whom the empathy is felt.
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The experience of abandonment trauma and fear of abandonment very likely drives much of the violent behavior of those who feel compelled to conform to social norms and of those who deviate from social norms to send painful messages to others. A society that integrates its violent nature consciously will have to reduce abandonment trauma and fear in the next generation or perpetuate the unconscious expressions of violence.
Abortion is a violent act that takes a wholly innocent human life. Today, it is committed in privacy and sanctioned by the State-established religion (i.e. moral philosophy), or lack thereof, really. Women commit abortion for wealth, pleasure, and leisure, and feel justified by a liberal society that has seen fit to normalize a wicked solution with a singular motive to secure a stable environment, taxable asset, and democratic leverage. The gender-equivalence movement, including sexual revolution, has been one of the most violent series of progressive actions in human history.
I take the viewpoint that all thought (and hence) behavior of a human is governed by the urge for survival. With the exception of immediate danger (active attack by a human or animal or some dangerous immediate situation) most of what governs thoughts is planning to relieve chronic anxiety. The source of chronic, low level (but sometimes painful) anxiety is also survival related. This is fear of nonacceptance by others. Normally, the desire is to feel accepted and valued by immediate family and members of the tribe. This is so built in to our mental processes because loss of value to the tribe or one's immediate circle of society implies that they will not take care of you when you are injured, sick, old or otherwise incapacitated. Life is a continual struggle to seek approval and acceptance.
Violence is a learned "tool" to alleviate anxiety of being attacked. Violence also commands a level of respect from others. The more respect you have, the more valuable you are and the more resources you can command to protect you or help you do things.
Nearly every wacky human behavior is a personal invention to relieve internal chronic anxiety attached to losing approval of others.
For your edification:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B0W9sSqeJnA#t=454
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