Expanding Rationality

Life is Violent

In the 30 years from 1980 to 2010, the population of Africa more than doubled. That is a natural rate of growth for a human population without environmental constraints. Actually, it is a low estimate, because there were famines, horrific wars and deadly diseases in Africa during those years. Also, many people in Africa had access to modern birth control. Nevertheless, the population doubled in less than 30 years. So, doubling every 30 years is a very conservative estimate of a natural rate of human population growth without war, disease, famine and modern birth control. Many populations have grown faster than that.

Consider how that rate of growth would increase a population over time.

2333 is a very big number. It is bigger than a googol, which is 10100. The Eddington number, which is the number of protons in the observable universe, is estimated at 1080. A googol is a hundred billion billion times bigger than the Eddington number.

The human species has existed for much longer than 10,000 years, but the human population today is between 7 and 8 billion. In 1800, it was roughly 1 billion. In 1960, it was only 3 billion. For most of human history, the population didn’t grow very much, if at all. What prevented it from doubling every 30 years?

War, disease and famine.

There aren’t any other significant causes of premature death for human beings. Some people died from accidents, but that was a minor cause of death except in times of famine and war. People are pushed into dangerous activities when they are hungry or scared. Some women died in childbirth, but not a very high percentage. The ability to bear children is, for obvious reasons, very strongly selected for. Some died from predators, but humans have been apex predators for a long time, much longer than 10,000 years. When humans first arrived in the Americas, more than 10,000 years ago, they quickly wiped out almost all the large animal species, including mammoths, mastodons, saber-toothed cats, giant wolves, giant ground sloths, horses, and many others. Humans are very good at killing.

So, for at least the last 10,000 years, the human population has been limited by war, disease and famine.

Death in old age or late middle age does not limit population growth. For most of human history, most people died in childhood or early adulthood. This is an obvious fact about nature, and it is true of every species. More offspring are produced than would be necessary to replace the population, and most die young.

Life is a struggle for limited resources. It doesn’t take long for a population to reach the carrying capacity of the environment. At that point, life becomes a zero-sum game.

Many people find it difficult to accept the intrinsically competitive nature of life, because it conflicts with their moral intuitions. Most people believe that altruism is good, and that most social problems can be solved with kindness. But nature doesn’t work that way, and we are part of nature.

Life is a struggle. That is why people have always killed one another, not because they were ignorant, superstitious or morally retarded. It is not religion or ideology that causes violence. It is the nature of life itself. People use religion or ideology to justify violence, and to organize into competing groups, but the ultimate cause of violence is the struggle for existence.

War is not an alternative to peace and prosperity. War is an alternative to famine and disease, and famine almost always leads to war. If you and your children are facing death by starvation, you will kill other people to get food. So, unless disease kills most children before adulthood, population growth will eventually lead to war. That is why war is a human universal. Our ancestors fought to survive. We inherited the genes and memes of the winners, not the losers.

It is important to understand this, and not believe romantic myths about human history or human nature. Life is violent, and we are violent. Violence is built into life, because life is a competition for limited resources.

Can we transcend the violent nature of life?

No.

Can we bring an end to war, disease and famine?

Maybe.

By T. K. Van Allen