Is there any species that uses deception as a hierarchical tool, other than human beings?
Is "mean" behaviour used as a tool to establish one's dominance over another human being?
Often in life you encounter people who undermine others for no apparent reason. We all understand that the person probably has their own personal issues, but from a more biological/evolutionary standpoint you still have people resorting to childish tactics against each other. For example, the group of "underminers" for lack of a better word, that form packs and send out "spies" to befriend people in order to gather more ammunition. Or the "underminers" that spread false rumours, or exaggerate things, or take things out of context in an attempt to destroy someone's credibility and value in the group/pack situation. I've heard arguments that this behaviour is limited to high school, but I find that it simply grows with people. You encounter the same situations in post-secondary education, in work environments, in families, even.
According to Paul R. Ehrlich in Human Natures: Genes, Cultures, and The Human Prospect (note, I'm paraphrasing someone else's explanation here, I have yet to find a copy of the book in English here in Europe), people have only been civilized for about 250 generations or so. In all the time before we were "civilized" we tended to aggregate in very small groups - and that we carry with us still that mentality at some level. At some point, these groups grow to the point where we lose our recognition of membership (at about 100 people or so). Beyond that, people stop being people per se, and become objects or enemies.
So, as a civilization, have we advanced to the point where we're just too plain big? Could this be an explanation for mean and undermining behaviour? Or is that simply hierarchical behaviour, common to every other animal out there? What causes an individual to behave this way? A group?
Any ideas?
Is "mean" behaviour used as a tool to establish one's dominance over another human being?
Often in life you encounter people who undermine others for no apparent reason. We all understand that the person probably has their own personal issues, but from a more biological/evolutionary standpoint you still have people resorting to childish tactics against each other. For example, the group of "underminers" for lack of a better word, that form packs and send out "spies" to befriend people in order to gather more ammunition. Or the "underminers" that spread false rumours, or exaggerate things, or take things out of context in an attempt to destroy someone's credibility and value in the group/pack situation. I've heard arguments that this behaviour is limited to high school, but I find that it simply grows with people. You encounter the same situations in post-secondary education, in work environments, in families, even.
According to Paul R. Ehrlich in Human Natures: Genes, Cultures, and The Human Prospect (note, I'm paraphrasing someone else's explanation here, I have yet to find a copy of the book in English here in Europe), people have only been civilized for about 250 generations or so. In all the time before we were "civilized" we tended to aggregate in very small groups - and that we carry with us still that mentality at some level. At some point, these groups grow to the point where we lose our recognition of membership (at about 100 people or so). Beyond that, people stop being people per se, and become objects or enemies.
So, as a civilization, have we advanced to the point where we're just too plain big? Could this be an explanation for mean and undermining behaviour? Or is that simply hierarchical behaviour, common to every other animal out there? What causes an individual to behave this way? A group?
Any ideas?