人性中的善良天使:为什么暴力有所减少

Kayla Jordan, Geoffrey W. Sutton
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引用次数: 965

摘要

人性中善良的一面:为什么暴力减少了。Steven Pinker,企鹅出版社,纽约,2011。ISBN 978-0-670-02295-3。今天早上锡克教寺庙发生枪击事件。一名持枪男子进入科罗拉多州一家剧院并开火。叙利亚人现在正陷入内战。面对每天关于死亡和毁灭的新闻报道,人们很容易相信事情正在变得更糟。并非如此,哈佛大学心理学家史蒂文·平克在他的新作《人性中的善良天使:为什么暴力在减少》中解释道。Pinker将深入的历史研究与严谨的心理学研究结合起来,论证了全球暴力减少的原因。正如平克恰当地指出的那样,许多人悲观地看待我们这个时代,认为它是一个前所未有的暴力和恐怖的时代。根据历史分析、心理学研究以及人类学、社会学和经济学等相关科学的发现,平克认为,这些数据描绘了一幅截然不同的图景。在第一章中,平克带领读者快速浏览世界历史,指出古代和中世纪的世界与我们今天生活的世界有很大的不同。许多史前骸骨都有暴力致死的证据。古代人摧毁了整个部落。罗马人实行暴力处决。中世纪的骑士领导了暴力的谎言,其他欧洲人对那些在今天的民主国家甚至可能被认为不值得谴责的行为施加了可怕的惩罚。最后,20世纪初经历了两次世界大战,之后才迎来了漫长的和平。鉴于这段历史,平克认为,也许我们应该重新考虑我们对自己世界的假设。在书的第一部分,平克指出了可能导致暴力减少的六个历史趋势。第一个趋势他称之为“和平进程”,人们放弃游牧狩猎和采集生活,转而在城市从事农业生活。史前世界的竞争和无政府状态使得暴力成为生存的必要手段。农业的发展需要人与人之间更大的合作,政府的形成需要加强秩序,这创造了一个暴力并不总是符合个人最佳利益的世界。统计分析支持这样一种观点,即国家的出现导致暴力的减少。第二种趋势,文明进程,是他从诺伯特·埃利亚斯的著作中发展出来的观点。在中世纪晚期和现代早期,礼仪和社会规范开始在社会交往中发挥重要作用,经济和技术开始进步,政府开始变得更加集中。这一趋势还伴随着暴力事件的减少。第三个趋势是人道主义革命,在此期间,人们开始越来越多地发现酷刑、死刑、战争和奴隶制等行为在道德上存在问题。同理心、同情心和和平成为了重要的特征。第四个趋势是长期和平,它源于人们认识到,自第二次世界大战以来,没有两个主要的世界大国发生过战争,而且,尽管有相反的预测,从未使用过核武器。...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined
THE BETTER ANGELS OF OUR NATURE: WHY VIOLENCE HAS DECLINED. Steven Pinker, Penguin, New York, NY 2011. ISBN 978-0-670-02295-3.There's been a shooting in a Sikh Temple this morning. A lone gunman entered a Colorado theater and opened fire. Syrians are now engaged in civil war. Faced with daily news stories of death and destruction, it is easy to believe that things are getting worse. Not so, explains Harvard psychologist, Steven Pinker in his new work, The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence has Declined.Pinker combines in-depth historical research with rigorous psychological research to argue the case for a decline in global violence. As Pinker aptly points out, many people look at our age as one of unprecedented violence and terror to be viewed with pessimism. Drawing on historical analysis, psychological research and findings from related sciences such as anthropology, sociology, and economics Pinker argues that the data paint a very different picture. In the first chapter, Pinker takes the reader on a quick journey through the history of the world pointing out that the ancient and medieval worlds were very different than the world we live in today. Numerous prehistoric skeletons bear evidence of very violent deaths. Ancient people destroyed entire tribes. Romans carried out violent executions. Medieval Knights led lies of violence and other Europeans meted out horrendous punishments for acts which might not even be judged worthy of condemnation in today's democracies. Finally, the early 20th century saw two World Wars before the long peace ensued. In light of that history, Pinker argues that perhaps we should reconsider our assumptions about our own world.In the first section of the book, Pinker identifies six historical trends which could have led to declines in violence. The first trend he calls the Pacification Process by which people gave up nomadic hunting and gathering lives for lives of agriculture in cities. Competition and anarchy in the prehistoric world made violence necessary for survival. The development of agriculture called for greater cooperation between individuals and the formation of governments to impose order created a world where violence was not always in one's best interest. Statistical analysis supports the idea that the emergence of states lead to a decline in violence. The second trend, the Civilizing Process, is an idea he developed from the work of Norbert Elias. In the late medieval and early modern periods, etiquette and social norms began to be important in social interactions, economics and technology began to advance, and governments began to become more centralized. This trend was also accompanied by a decline in violence. The third trend is the Humanitarian Revolution during which people began to increasingly find practices, such as torture, capital punishment, war and slavery, morally questionable. Empathy, compassion, and peace became important characteristics. The fourth trend is the Long Peace, which stems from the realization that since World War II no two major world powers have gone to war and, in spite of predictions to the contrary, nuclear weapons have never been used. …
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