Frost Peter
Department of Anthropology, Université Laval, Quebec City, Canada.
Evol Psychol. 2010 Jul 23;8(3):376-89. doi: 10.1177/147470491000800306.
Over the last 10,000 years, the human genome has changed at an accelerating rate. The change seems to reflect adaptations to new social environments, including the rise of the State and its monopoly on violence. State societies punish young men who act violently on their own initiative. In contrast, non-State societies usually reward such behavior with success, including reproductive success. Thus, given the moderate to high heritability of male aggressiveness, the State tends to remove violent predispositions from the gene pool while favoring tendencies toward peacefulness and submission. This perspective is applied here to the Roman state, specifically its long-term effort to pacify the general population. By imperial times, this effort had succeeded so well that the Romans saw themselves as being inherently less violent than the "barbarians" beyond their borders. By creating a pacified and submissive population, the empire also became conducive to the spread of Christianity--a religion of peace and submission. In sum, the Roman state imposed a behavioral change that would over time alter the mix of genotypes, thus facilitating a subsequent ideological change.
在过去一万年里,人类基因组的变化速度一直在加快。这种变化似乎反映了对新社会环境的适应,包括国家的兴起及其对暴力的垄断。国家社会会惩罚主动实施暴力行为的年轻男性。相比之下,非国家社会通常会以成功,包括生殖成功来奖励这种行为。因此,鉴于男性攻击性具有中度到高度的遗传性,国家往往会从基因库中消除暴力倾向,同时青睐和平与顺从的倾向。这里将这一观点应用于罗马国家,特别是其长期致力于安抚普通民众的努力。到了帝国时期,这项努力取得了巨大成功,以至于罗马人认为自己本质上比边境之外的“野蛮人”更少暴力倾向。通过创造一个和平顺从的民众群体,帝国也变得有利于基督教——一种倡导和平与顺从的宗教——的传播。总之,罗马国家强制实施了一种行为变化,随着时间的推移,这种变化会改变基因型的组合,从而促进随后的意识形态变化。