Study: Humans inherit murderous tendencies
However, researchers suggest the level of lethal violence is reversible
WASHINGTON — Evolution and genetics seem to have baked a certain amount of murder into humans as a species, but civilization has tamed some of the savage beast in us, according to a new study.
Scientists calculated the rate at which more than 1,000 mammal species kill their own kind and noticed how closely related species have similar rates of lethal violence. They essentially found that where a species is on evolutionary tree of life tells a lot about how violent the species is to its own kind. And we’re in a rough neighborhood.
Humans are “in a position within a particularly violent mammalian clade, in which violence seems to have been ancestrally present,” the study in the journal Nature says. That means that, based on other rather murderous species closely related to us, humans have “inherited their propensity for violence.”
As a group, mammals average a lethal violence rate against their own of about three killings of their own species in 1,000 deaths. The “root” violence rate of early humans and many of our closer primate cousins is about 20 in 1,000, said study lead author Jose Maria Gomez at the University of Granada in Spain. In the medieval period, between 700 and 1500 A.D., that deadly rate shot up to about 120 per 1,000.
But we’ve gotten less murderous.
On average, modern humans now kill each on a rate of 13 per 1,000, Gomez said, basing his calculations on World Health Organization data. But he says the exact numbers are rough and depend on many technical variables, so what is more accurate is to say “violence has decreased significantly in the contemporary age.”
“It seems that we are, in the present time, less violent than we were in the past,” Gomez said in an email interview.
While humans are killing each other less than we once did, we are not nearly as peaceful as the killer whale — which, despite the name, has a rate of interpersonal violence of pretty much zero (though Gomez notes that only a small sample of killer whales was examined). Many whale species, bats and anteaters are particularly peaceful to their own kind, the study finds.
But humans are far less violent than the cougar, certain baboons, lemurs and chinchillas that have murder rates of well over 100 per 1,000.
The study looks at violence through the lens of phylogenetics — the study of evolutionary relationships, or how closely related species seem to share common traits.
“We found that closely related mammal species tend to have similar levels of violence,” Gomez said. The more closely related the species are, the more similar are their violence levels.
Gomez and colleagues used 1,044 studies that looked at 1,024 different mammal species, with the causes of death determined for more than 4 million individual mammals. Then, for each species, researchers counted the number of deaths due to a member of the species killing another. They didn’t use studies where they couldn’t find causes of death. And because of the study’s historical nature, Gomez could examine only killings, not wounding.
Moving up in evolutionary complexity often seems a walk on the wild side, especially in the branches of the tree of life where humans come from.
“Our study suggests that the level of lethal violence is reversible and can increase or decrease as a consequence of some ecological, social or cultural factors,” Gomez said.