Violence Is Not Law of Nature
Seville Statement on Violence (1986)
The difficult task we face at the beginning of 2004 is 'not to get
used to war'. This includes recalling everything that has been achieved
in the question of war and peace. In the 'International Year of Peace'
in 1986 the Seville Statement on Violence was issued by 20 renowned
scientists. It states the views of various scientific fields that
violence and aggression are not a law of nature, and by doing so is
directed against the use of science to justify war and violence. Wars
are conceived in the human mind. May the optimistic note of the
statement, which was subsequently adopted by UNESCO in 1989, and has
now been signed by more than 100 national and international scientific
societies and associations, help to provide us with hope for 2004.
The Seville Declaration
Believing that it is our responsibility to address from our
particular disciplines the most dangerous and destructive activities of
our species, violence and war; recognizing that science is a human
cultural product which cannot be definitive or all-encompassing; and
gratefully acknowledging the support of the authorities of Seville and
representatives of the Spanish UNESCO; we, the undersigned scholars
from around the world and from relevant sciences, have met and arrived
at the following Statement on Violence. In it, we challenge a number of
alleged biological findings that have been used, even by some in our
disciplines, to justify violence and war. Because the alleged findings
have contributed to an atmosphere of pessimism in our time, we submit
that the open, considered rejection of these mis-statements can
contribute significantly to the International Year of Peace. Misuse of
scientific theories and data to justify violence and war is not new but
has been made since the advent of modern science. For example, the
theory of evolution has been used to justify not only war, but also
genocide, colonialism, and suppression of the weak. We state our
position in the form of five propositions. We are aware that there are
many other issues about violence and war that could be fruitfully
addressed from the standpoint of our disciplines, but we restrict
ourselves here to what we consider a most important first step.
The cultural aspect
It is scientifically incorrect to say that we have inherited a
tendency to make war from our animal ancestors. Although fighting
occurs widely throughout animal species, only a few cases of
destructive intra-species fighting between organized groups have ever
been reported among naturally living species, and none of these involve
the use of tools designed to be weapons. Normal predatory feeding upon
other species cannot be equated with intra-species violence. Warfare is
a peculiarly human phenomenon and does not occur in other animals.The
fact that warfare has changed so radically over time indicates that it
is a product of culture. Its biological connection is primarily through
language which makes possible the co-ordination of groups, the
transmission of technology, and the use of tools. War is biologically
possible, but it is not inevitable, as evidenced by its variation in
occurrence and nature over time and space. There are cultures which
have not engaged in war for centuries, and there are cultures which
have engaged in war frequently at some times and not at others.
Genetics
It is scientifically incorrect to say that war or any other violent
behaviour is genetically programmed into our human nature. While genes
are involved at all levels of nervous system function, they provide a
developmental potential that can be actualized only in conjunction with
the ecological and social environment. While individuals vary in their
predispositions to be affected by their experience, it is the
interaction between their genetic endowment and conditions of
nurturance that determines their personalities. Except for rare
pathologies, the genes do not produce individuals necessarily
predisposed to violence. Neither do they determine the opposite. While
genes are co-involved in establishing our behavioural capacities, they
do not by themselves specify the outcome.
Human evolution
It is scientifically incorrect to say that in the course of human
evolution there has been a selection for aggressive behaviour more than
for other kinds of behaviour. In all well-studied species, status
within the group is achieved by the ability to co-operate and to fulfil
social functions relevant to the structure of that group. 'Dominance'
involves social bindings and affiliations; it is not simply a matter of
the possession and use of superior physical power, although it does
involve aggressive behaviours. Where genetic selection for aggressive
behaviour has been artificially instituted in animals, it has rapidly
succeeded in producing hyper-aggressive individuals; this indicates
that aggression was not maximally selected under natural conditions.
When such experimentally-created hyperaggressive animals are present in
a social group, they either disrupt its social structure or are driven
out. Violence is neither in our evolutionary legacy nor in our genes.
Neurophysiology
It is scientifically incorrect to say that humans have a 'violent
brain'. While we do have the neural apparatus to act violently, it is
not automatically activated by internal or external stimuli. Like
higher primates and unlike other animals, our higher neural processes
filter such stimuli before they can be acted upon. How we act is shaped
by how we have been conditioned and socialized. There is nothing in our
neurophysiology that compels us to react violently.
Psychology
It is scientifically incorrect to say that war is caused by
'instinct' or any single motivation. The emergence of modern warfare
has been a journey from the primacy of emotional and motivational
factors, sometimes called 'instincts', to the primacy of cognitive
factors. Modern war involves institutional use of personal
characteristics such as obedience, suggestibility, and idealism, social
skills such as language, and rationalconsiderations such as
cost-calculation, planning, and information processing. The technology
of modern war has exaggerated traits associated with violence both in
the training of actual combatants and in the preparation of support for
war in the general population. As a result of this exaggeration, such
traits are often mistaken to be the causes rather than the consequences
of the process.
Conclusions
We conclude that biology does not condemn humanity to war, and that
humanity can be freed from the bondage of biological pessimism and
empowered with confidence to undertake the transformative tasks needed
in this International Year of Peace and in the years to come. Although
these tasks are mainly institutional and collective, they also restupon
the consciousness of individual participants for whom pessimism and
optimism are crucial factors. Just as 'wars begin in the minds of men',
peace also begins in our minds. The same species who invented war is
capable of inventing peace. The responsibility lies with each of us.
Seville, 16 May 1986
Initial signatories of the Sevilla declaration:
David Adams, Psychology, Wesleyan University, Middletown,
CT., U.S.A.; S.A. Barnett, Ethology, The Australian National
University, Canberra, Australia; N.P. Bechtereva, Neurophysiology,
Institute for Experimental Medicine of Academy of Medical Sciences of
the U.S.S.R., Leningrad, U.S.S.R.; Bonnie Frank Carter, Psychology,
Albert Einstein Medical Center, Philadelphia (PA), U.S.A.; José M.
Rodriguez Delgado, Neurophysiology, Centro de Estudios Neurobiologicos,
Madrid, Spain; José Luis Diaz, Ethology, Instituto Mexicano de
Psiquiatria, Mexico D.F., Mexico; Andrzej Eliasz, Individual
Differences Psychology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland;
Santiago Genovés, Biological Anthropology, Instituto de Estudios
Antropologicos, Mexico D.F., Mexico; Benson E. Ginsburg, Behavior
Genetics, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT., U.S.A.; Jo Groebel,
Social Psychology, Erziehungswissenschaftliche Hochschule, Landau,
Federal Republic of Germany; Samir-Kumar Ghosh, Sociology, Indian
Institute of Human Sciences, Calcutta, India; Robert Hinde, Animal
Behaviour, Cambridge University, Cambridge, U.K.; Richard E. Leakey,
Physical Anthropology, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya; Taha
H. Malasi, Psychiatry, Kuwait University, Kuwait; J. Martin Ramirez,
Psychobiology, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain; Federico Mayor Zaragoza,
Biochemistry, Universidad Autonoma, Madrid, Spain; Diana L. Mendoza,
Ethology, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain; Ashis Nandy, Political
Psychology, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, Delhi, India;
John Paul Scott, Animal Behavior, Bowling Green State University,
Bowling Green, OH., U.S.A.Riitta Wahlstrom, Psychology, University of
Jyväskylä, Finland;
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