Nothing to Fear From Governments?
Anxiety disorder
rates have risen twentyfold in 30 years -- largely because psychiatry
misunderstands human nature ALLAN V. HORWITZ Board of Governors
Professor of Sociology at Rutgers University HERE:
“Our new era of
anxiety”
“Excerpted with permission from “All We Have
to Fear: Psychiatry’s Transformation of Natural Anxieties into Mental
Disorders,” from Oxford University Press. These anxieties are out of proportion to the
actual danger in the present environment yet seem understandable as reactions
that came down to us as part of our biological inheritance of fears that did
make sense in the prehistoric past.
Early hominids had
much to fear. The most ancient stages of human evolution featured environments
where people without powerful weaponry faced numerous predators, could do
little to protect themselves from harsh climates and natural disasters, and
were defenseless against disease. Food was often scarce and in many
environments was impossible to preserve for long periods of time. Dangers were
everywhere at the same time that security from threats was weak and often
unavailable. Small bands of just one or two hundred people faced other hostile
groups of humans and other predators, without any government to protect them.
Although a range of strategies could be adaptive for dealing with some specific
circumstances, on average, vigilance, caution, and readiness to flee at a
moment’s notice would probably have had the greatest evolutionary payoff.”
Comment
On reading this article,
I was struck by the notion that one source of fear was anxiety among late
hominids and early humans lived in small bands “without any government to
protect them”. One
does not have to be a libertarian to consider the mixed blessings of
“government” in respect of protection depends largely upon the application of
justice. Governments,
of whatever nature, can inflict serious harm on the members on band, large and small,
can (and did, does) inflict serious harm upon a society by compelling its
members to harm nearby societies, which causes revenge retaliations and
punitive ventures on its members.
Other than with that
caveat, the article is worth a look.
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