The point is, though, that the other study
Which other study? I did read the one you linked and now you speak about another one?
made it clear that humans diverged from the ancestor of chimps and bonobos millions of years BEFORE the Bonobos later split off from the common chimpanzees.
That is said in the one you linked. Ok, let’s admit it anyway. Then this conclusion of the authors (
“We conclude that more than 3% of the human genome is more closely related to either bonobos or chimpanzees than these are to each other”) doesn’t seem to fit with your phrase below:
So, as a logical deduction, the bonobos have less much DNA in common with humans than common chimpanzees have with us.
I suppose you meant
“much less”, didn’t you?
They say:
“This showed that 1.6% of the human genome is more closely related to the bonobo genome than to the chimpanzee genome, and that 1.7% of the human genome is more closely related to the chimpanzee than to the bonobo genome”. I don’t feel that a difference between 1,6% and 1,7% could be considered as
“much”. I would rather call it insignificant.
I never believed in the Man is inherently peaceful nonsense, anyway.
So, you’ve always had an immutable belief (a negative one) that never changed and won’t ever change, whatever evidence is brought up to you, isn’t it? You and Van didn’t even bother to read the references I provided above.
Personally, I never had any inflexible opinion and I’ve avoided all beliefs since I was 16. I’m just curious and
highly disappointed by both of your reactions.
I see Man as always having wiped out entire species from the very beginning. I doubt that the introduction of fire, let alone Neolithic culture, would have changed humans from peaceful beings to warlike ones.
We are not talking about interspecies violence but about intra-species relations. Anyway, hominids didn’t wipe out entire species before using the fire and maybe not even before the Neolithic as it is not sure at all that the megafauna extinction was due to human hunting and overkill.
After all, even modern HGs are prone to warfare. It is only exceptions like the Inuit who never did, but that was only due to the constraints of a savage climate.
What could be the influence of climate on aggressiveness?
According to what I read not all modern HGs are prone to warfare, although the few remaining are subject to territorial and environmental pressure from the civilization around them. Eveheart made a valid point in telling that
“much like human nature today - when there is enough to go around, we all live in peace; in times of shortage, we vie with each other for whatever we deem to be in short supply.” In this regard, it’s is widely reckoned today that the Neolithic revolution caused overpopulation, concentrations of humans in groups larger than about 150, shortages, famines and wars.
It’s plain obvious that
empathy and mutual aid are normal for humans and even for most mammals. Intra-species aggression happens only in situations out of natural balance. Can’t you see that?