dave_a_mbs
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central california
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Lucy and Doc- OK, I'm in basic agreeement, and of course there's very little to be said about useless killing. Except for the chase and killing of Colubus by chimps I had the impression that only Man was the only critter that kills for sport. Are we setting a bad example to our longer tailed friends? The idea about simian macho bonding makes some kind of sense. It also fits territorial and caste concepts. And, very unfortunately, it fits right in with observed behaviors in oppressive regions where rape is used as a social weapon to dispossess people of their social status, and where the husband blames the wife for getting raped.
It seems that the nature of males is rejecting, isolating and destructive. The moose in rut, elephant in must, and similar animals are examples. This clearly points to mating behaviors and competitions. However, in matriarchies we are not free from violence either. Although the competition that comes to my mind at the moment is more the Soap Opera type, my wife has many stories about tough girls in school, fighting and so on.
These ideas are reflected in many urban areas in territorial gangs. Presumably, as we get socialized we are able to accept the idea of a larger and more valuable social purpose for which we create a social contract of unity. Buddhist and Hindu philosophies, arising generally in lush areas in which wild food was not uncommon, seem to have incorporated some of this unity into their general outlook as a beneficial quality of social living. The world offers us the opportunity to be social, and from this we have the gains and joys of social living. How fortunate that we can do this.
The Arab social historian Ibn Khaldoun, in his Muqqadimah, pointed out that the world is a fierce and hostile place, that the survival chances for a single person are quite minimal, so we're forced to live together in social groups in order that we do not perish. This is an enforced socialization, and not at all a matter of being fortunate. Instead, it is a matter of dire compatition. Evidently the mullahs, who are the present mouthpieces for Islam, find that life is like a caravan moving across an endless desert, in which all interference is a lethal threat, and not an offer of companionship. Couple this to macho territoriality and it is an incendiary situation.
I find it sad that the sons of Abraham can't play in the same sandbox without fighting. We could go back to Jacob and Esau, but in the modern world, I think Adam Smith is more pertinent. Were I able to input my opinions into the situation, I'd be inclined to suggest that the Middle East nations, most of which are Islamic, should form a commonwealth, rather like the OPEC common governance of resources, and through the economic power of their commonwealth they would begin to settle issues in the region. But there seems to be disagreement even at that level, as between Syria and Lebanon etc. Still, when considered in the light of the entire world, Ibn Khaldoun's counsel to form a social group in order to survive still seems pertinent.
dave
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