We must distinguish in man two entirely different kinds of aggression. The first, which he shares with all animals, is a phylogenetically programmed impulse to attack (or to flee) when vital interests are threatened. This defensive, “benign” aggression is in the service of the survival of the individual and the species, is biologically adaptive, and ceases when the threat has ceased to exist. The other type, “malignant” aggression, i.e., cruelty and destructiveness, is specific to the human species and virtually absent in most mammals; it is not phylogenetically programmed and not biologically adaptive; it has no purpose, and its satisfaction is lustful. — Erich Fromm, The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness
This distinction divorces human aggression from animal aggression, in opposition to the widely accepted myth that 'malignant' human aggression has its roots in an animal past. — ZzzoneiroCosm
...his distinction between types of aggression doesn't make sense to me. — Clarky
Many social animals have hierarchal communities with structures of dominance enforced by aggression and submission. — Clarky
... “malignant” aggression, i.e., cruelty and destructiveness...has no purpose, and its satisfaction is lustful. — ZzzoneiroCosm
This distinction divorces human aggression from animal aggression, in opposition to the widely accepted myth that 'malignant' human aggression has its roots in an animal past. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Wolves are notorious where I live for killing cattle without eating it. Killing for the sake of killing, it seems. — Tzeentch
Wolves are notorious where I live for killing cattle without eating it. Killing for the sake of killing, it seems. — Tzeentch
No they have a reason-- training for hunting. If cattle is made available, that's where they're going to practice.Wolves are notorious where I live for killing cattle without eating it. Killing for the sake of killing, it seems. — Tzeentch
I agree. No maliciousness in animals, except what's programmed into them such as being head of the pack, scarcity of food, training the youngs to hunt, etc.This distinction divorces human aggression from animal aggression, in opposition to the widely accepted myth that 'malignant' human aggression has its roots in an animal past. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Would you say this dog and this cat were being cruel? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Would you say these wolves are being cruel? — ZzzoneiroCosm
No they have a reason-- training for hunting. If cattle is made available, that's where they're going to practice. — L'éléphant
I tried to draw attention to why such an act is considered malignant when a human does it, but not when an animal does it. — Tzeentch
Why is it that when an animal exhibits such behavior we excuse it, but when a human does it we label it as malignant, though? — Tzeentch
So it's intelligence what makes people more cruel than animals. — SpaceDweller
So humans need to practice to hunt to survive? What happened to farm animals, manufacturers, distributors, and supermarket stores?Why is it that when an animal exhibits such behavior we excuse it, but when a human does it we label it as malignant, though? — Tzeentch
So humans need to practice to hunt to survive? — L'éléphant
if you're an idiot, you can't be cruel! — Agent Smith
So we might say: Thank god there's so many idiots about — ZzzoneiroCosm
This distinction divorces human aggression from animal aggression, in opposition to the widely accepted myth that 'malignant' human aggression has its roots in an animal past — ZzzoneiroCosm
It's not cruelty when animals hunt. Humans hunt for entertainment. Farm animals supply the food.why is it when an animal is cruel we excuse it as practice or instinct, but when a human does it we label it as malignant aggression? — Tzeentch
Perhaps Lorenz’s neoinstinctivism was so successful not because his arguments are so strong, but because people are so susceptible to them, What could be more welcome to people who are frightened and feel impotent to change the course leading to destruction than a theory that assures us that violence stems from our animal nature, from an ungovernable drive for aggression, and that the best we can do, as Lorenz asserts, is to understand the law of evolution that accounts for the power of this drive? This theory of an innate aggressiveness easily becomes an ideology that helps to soothe the fear of what is to happen and to rationalize the sense of impotence. — Fromm, Ibid
Konrad Lorenz’s On Aggression (K. Lorenz, 1966) became within a short time of its publication one of the most widely read books in the field of social psychology...[On Aggression] appeals to the thinking of many people today who prefer to believe that our drift toward violence and nuclear war is due to biological factors beyond our control, rather than to open their eyes and see that it is due to social, political, and economic circumstances of our own making. — Ibid
Lorenz’s assumption of forty thousand years of organized warfare is nothing but the old Hobbesian cliché of war as the natural state of man, presented as an argument to prove the innateness of human aggressiveness. — Ibid
Paleontology, anthropology, and history offer ample evidence against the instinctivistic thesis: (1) human groups differ so fundamentally in the respective degree of destructiveness that the facts could hardly be explained by the assumption that destructiveness and cruelty are innate; (2) various degrees of destructiveness can be correlated to other psychical factors and to differences in respective social structures, and (3) the degree of destructiveness increases with the increased development of civilization, rather than the opposite. Indeed, the picture of innate destructiveness fits history much better than prehistory. — Fromm, Ibid (bolds mine)
My thesis—to be demonstrated in the following chapters—is that destructiveness and cruelty are not instinctual drives, but passions rooted in the total existence of man. They are one of the ways to make sense of life; they are not and could not be present in the animal, because they are by their very nature rooted in the “human condition.” The main error of Lorenz and other instinctivists is to have confused the two kinds of drives, those rooted in instinct, and those rooted in character. — Ibid
The instinctivist movement based on Darwin’s teaching reflects the basic assumption of nineteenth-century capitalism. Capitalism as a system in which harmony is created by ruthless competition between all individuals would appear to be a natural order if one could prove that the most complex and remarkable phenomenon, man, is a product of the ruthless competition among all living beings since the emergence of life. — Ibid
Freud himself never claimed that the libido theory was a scientific certainty. He called it “our mythology,” and replaced it with the theory of the Eros and death “instincts.” It is equally significant that he defined psychoanalysis as a theory based on resistance and transference—and by omission, not on the libido theory...Freud’s revolution was to make us recognize the unconscious aspect of man’s mind and the energy which he uses to repress the awareness of undesirable desires. — Ibid
...animals, too, exhibit extreme and vicious destructiveness when the environmental and social balance is disturbed, although this occurs only as an exception— for instance, under conditions of crowding. It could be concluded that man is so much more destructive because he has created conditions like crowding or other aggression-producing constellations that have become normal rather than exceptional in his history. Hence, man’s hyperaggression is not due to a greater aggressive potential but to the fact that aggression-producing conditions are much more frequent for humans than for animals living in their natural habitat. This argument is valid— as far as it goes... — Ibid
But the fact remains that man often acts cruelly and destructively even in situations that do not include crowding. Destructiveness and cruelty can cause him to feel intense satisfaction; masses of men can suddenly be seized by lust for blood. Individuals and groups may have a character structure that makes them eagerly wait for— or create— situations that permit the expression of destructiveness. — Ibid
The main error of [the] instinctivists is to have confused the two kinds of drives, those rooted in instinct, and those rooted in character. — Ibid
The sadistic person is sadistic because he is suffering from an impotence of the heart, from the incapacity to move the other, to make him respond, to make oneself a loved person. He compensates for that impotence with the passion to have power over others. — Ibid
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