Kissel Marc, Kim Nam C
Department of Anthropology, Appalachian State University College of Arts and Sciences, Boone, North Carolina.
Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2019 Jan;168 Suppl 67:141-163. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.23751. Epub 2018 Dec 21.
The origins of warfare have long been of interest for researchers across disciplines. Did our earliest ancestors engage in forms of organized violence that are appropriately viewed as approximations, forms of, or analogs for more recent forms of warfare? Assessed in this article are contrasting views that see warfare as being either a product of more recent human societies or a phenomenon with a much deeper chronology. The article provides an overview of current debates, theories, and methodological approaches, citing literature and data from archaeological, ethnographic, genetic, primatological, and paleoanthropological studies. Synthetic anthropological treatments are needed, especially in efforts to inform debates among nonacademic audiences, because the discipline's approaches are ideally suited to study the origins of warfare. Emphasized is the need to consider possible forms of violence and intergroup aggression within Pleistocene contexts, despite the methodological challenges associated with fragmentary, equivocal, or scarce data. Finally, the review concludes with an argument about the implications of the currently available data. We propose that socially cooperative violence, or "emergent warfare," became possible with the onset of symbolic thought and complex cognition. Viewing emergent warfare as a byproduct of the human capacity for symbolic thought explains how the same capacities for communication and sociality allowed for elaborate peacemaking, conflict resolution, and avoidance. Cultural institutions around war and peace are both made possible by these changes. Accordingly, we suggest that studies on warfare's origins should be tied to research on the advent of cooperation, sociality, and communication.
长期以来,战争的起源一直是跨学科研究人员感兴趣的话题。我们最早的祖先是否参与过有组织的暴力形式,这些形式是否可以恰当地被视为近代战争形式的近似形式、某种形式或类似形式?本文评估了两种截然不同的观点,一种观点认为战争是近代人类社会的产物,另一种观点则认为战争是一种有着更悠久历史的现象。本文概述了当前的辩论、理论和方法论方法,并引用了考古学、人种学、遗传学、灵长类动物学和古人类学研究的文献和数据。需要进行综合性的人类学研究,尤其是在向非学术受众传达辩论观点的努力中,因为该学科的方法非常适合研究战争的起源。尽管存在与零散、模糊或稀缺数据相关的方法论挑战,但仍强调有必要考虑更新世背景下可能存在的暴力形式和群体间攻击行为。最后,这篇综述以关于现有数据的影响的论点作为结论。我们认为,随着象征思维和复杂认知的出现,社会合作性暴力,即“新兴战争”,成为了可能。将新兴战争视为人类象征思维能力的副产品,这解释了同样的沟通和社交能力如何促成了精心的调解、冲突解决和避免。围绕战争与和平的文化制度都是由这些变化促成的。因此,我们建议关于战争起源的研究应该与关于合作、社交和沟通出现的研究联系起来。