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Re: War and violence among chimpanzees
Most preditor type animals are territorial. They sort of own and guard a track of land, which is used and needed for their survival. They will try to scare away or eat invaders to assure survival. Animals, like chimps and humans are social animals that work well in teams. The tracks of land they defend, are against both solitary preditor animals, as well as against other teams of similar animals. As the teams get bigger due to breeding and plentiful food, they need increasing amounts of territory for the team to survive. The result is territory expansion that begins to overlap territories held by other teams. Eventually, shear numbers on one team begins to overwelm the instinctive defensive strength of the home team. The home team responds with innovations such as clubs and other simple weapons of war. The rest is history.
With the invention of higher culture about 6000-10,000 years ago, the needs of the human teams increased beyond food, to all those things needed to support culture and prestige. This required more land as well as specific lands for resource needs. The result was increasing appetites, needs and sophisication leading to increasing scale warfare.
Unlike social preditors like wolves, chimps and lions which seem to peak out in small groups, thereby only requiring moderate amounts of land, human are able to keep on expanding because of culture. Fortunarely for nature, many strong teams form, causing a forced restriction on unconstrained expansion. The necessary result was the need to develop strategies to support larger populations on less land, leading to higher levels of techincal and social sophistication.
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