I grant you this: You are very good at waffling and sprouting platitudes. What exactly is your opinion in regard to the opening post?Audley Strange wrote:You cannot have civilisation without violence. For to be civilised means to behave in a way that is considered civilised. To create such a situation one must use violence, discipline and punitive measures against people who do not adhere to the rules of such a group in order to create a cohesive civil structure in the first place.
Mine is that violence - at least in democratic, capitalist nations - has definitely declined over the centuries. We no longer burn witches or heretics. Today we are content with ridiculing new ageism and arguing with theists of whatever colour. Homosexuals are no longer gaoled and women are protected from rape within marriage.
And take a look at the treatment of the unemployed: The Enclosures in England and Wales resulted in massive unemployment. These unemployed hordes started to wander about the lands, looking for work. Measures were taken to handle this problem. Among them were these: In 1388, the Statute of Cambridge introduced regulations restricting the movements of all labourers and beggars. Labourers wishing to move out of their own county "Hundred" needed a letter of authority from the "good man of the Hundred" — the local Justice of the Peace — or risked being put in the stocks. In 1494, the Vagabonds and Beggars Act determined that: "Vagabonds, idle and suspected persons shall be set in the stocks for three days and three nights and have none other sustenance but bread and water and then shall be put out of Town. Every beggar suitable to work shall resort to the Hundred where he last dwelled, is best known, or was born and there remain upon the pain aforesaid." the Statute of Legal Settlement in 1547 enacted that a "sturdy beggar" could be whipped and branded through the right ear with a hot iron, or made a slave for two years — or for life if he absconded. The Act condemned "...foolish pity and mercy" for vagrants. It also made provisions for branding and hanging. An Act of 1564 aimed to suppress the "roaming beggar" by empowering parish officers to "appoint meet and convenient places for the habitations and abidings" of such classes — one of the first references to what was subsequently to evolve into the workhouse. Under the reign of Henry VIII alone it is estimated that 40,000 people were hanged for committing the crime of being unemployed.
In light of what I posted here, what do you prefer?rEvolutionist wrote:States are more crafty these days. There's no use in murdering vast numbers of people, as that doesn't lead to good wealth production. Far better to enslave people both psychologically and financially such that most of their existence is concerned with trading the meagre resources they have (their own labour) for even greater wealth at the top end of society. I actually don't find that very civilised.
For those who have not read his book (that includes me) Pinker's TED Talk on the subject may be useful. Near the start he remarks that those statistics are necessarily conjectural and explains how he derived them.Pappa wrote:Does Pinker provide a source for his statistics on tribal peoples? The phrase "tribal peoples" is an extremely broad brush.