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Aggression Demythologized
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13650 |
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BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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8 / 1988 |
2,601 Words |
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Ashley Montagu Ashley Montagu is the author of The Nature of Human Aggression
(1976) and editor of Man and Aggression (1973), Learning Non-
Aggression (1978), Sociobiology Examined (1980), Science and
Creationism (1985), and many other books. |
AGGRESSION: THE MYTH OF THE BEAST WITHIN
John Klama
New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1988
169 pp., $17.95
In our nuclear-weaponed world the threat of imminent destruction hangs over us all like an invisible darkness in the sunlight. I am reminded of the occasion when an American reporter asked Gandhi what he thought of Western civilization. Gandhi lowered his head a bit, and looking up, replied, smilingly, "You know, I don't think it would be such a bad idea."
Threats or actual violence are not unknown among uncivilized societies, or even among other animals. The evidence of a relationship between the highly advanced Western industrial societies and a high frequency of inter- and intra-group violence is indisputable.
Violence and the threat of violence have become so much a part of life in civilized societies, and have evoked so many discussions, books, monographs, and portrayals in the media, that most people seem to have become inured to it. More people prefer to read and watch murder mysteries on TV, at the movies, or in books and newspapers, than they do almost anything else. Violence and virulence seem to have a fascination all their own. And since there are many "authorities"--like Konrad Lorenz, whose book On Aggression was an international bestseller; Robert Ardrey, author of African Genesis; and Desmond Morris, author of The Naked Ape, not to mention numerous others--who tell us that aggression has a long evolutionary history and is an intrinsic part of human nature, most people
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