The Argument Against Man Being a Social Animal

From the time of Aristotle it had been said that man is a social animal: that human beings naturally form communities. I couldn't accept it. The whole of history and pre-history is against it. The two dreadful world wars we have recently been through, and the gearing of our entire economy today for defensive war belie it. Man's loathsome cruelty to man is his most outstanding characteristic; it is explicable only in terms of his carnivorous and cannibalistic origin. Robert Hartmann pointed out that both rude and civilised peoples show unspeakable cruelty to one another. We call it inhuman cruelty; but these dreadful things are unhappily truly human, because there is nothing like them in the animal world. A lion or tiger kills to eat, but the indiscriminate slaughter and calculated cruelty of human beings is quite unexampled in nature, especially among the apes. They display no hostility to man or other animals unless attacked. Even then their first reaction is to run away.

Notes:

Man kills for fun, Dart argues, which no other animal does. This is not exactly true.

Folksonomies: biology society sociology violence

Taxonomies:
/pets/reptiles (0.448492)
/society/unrest and war (0.442543)
/society (0.440285)

Keywords:
dreadful world wars (0.974193 (negative:-0.636610)), human beings (0.911414 (negative:-0.086015)), social animal (0.889227 (neutral:0.000000)), Social Animal Man (0.884474 (neutral:0.000000)), defensive war belie (0.869377 (neutral:0.000000)), inhuman cruelty (0.739946 (negative:-0.795490)), unspeakable cruelty (0.732340 (negative:-0.843112)), dreadful things (0.617197 (negative:-0.754063)), civilised peoples (0.576898 (negative:-0.843112)), cannibalistic origin (0.568218 (negative:-0.589269)), indiscriminate slaughter (0.558486 (negative:-0.492884)), outstanding characteristic (0.552709 (neutral:0.000000)), Robert Hartmann (0.529191 (negative:-0.843112)), entire economy (0.520436 (neutral:0.000000)), animal world (0.445662 (negative:-0.662005)), kills (0.237167 (negative:-0.409208)), hostility (0.229905 (negative:-0.447998)), pre-history (0.223020 (negative:-0.404846)), gearing (0.214178 (neutral:0.000000)), Argument (0.206470 (neutral:0.000000))

Entities:
Robert Hartmann:Person (0.883288 (negative:-0.843112)), Dart:Person (0.807142 (neutral:0.000000)), Aristotle:Person (0.770879 (neutral:0.000000))

Concepts:
Mammal (0.956218): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Africa (0.866066): dbpedia | freebase | yago
Human (0.858302): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Hominidae (0.789362): dbpedia | freebase
Primate (0.785035): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Chimpanzee (0.773093): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Prehistory (0.754791): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Human evolution (0.693006): dbpedia | freebase

 Africa's place in the emergence of civilisation
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Dart , Raymond Arthur (1959*), Africa's place in the emergence of civilisation, Retrieved on 2012-03-23
  • Source Material [books.google.com]
  • Folksonomies: history