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2026年4月22日 星期三

The Broken Safety Catch: Why Humans Kill Like No Other Animal

 

The Broken Safety Catch: Why Humans Kill Like No Other Animal

Desmond Morris delivers a chilling blow to our self-image as a "civilized" species. He points out that in the animal kingdom, aggression is rarely a death sentence. When two wolves or lions fight, they use a sophisticated system of submission signals. As soon as the loser realizes they’ve been bested, they expose their throat or belly—a biological "white flag." This triggers an ancient, hard-wired inhibitory mechanism in the winner, who instinctively stops the attack. The loser keeps their life, and the species keeps its genetic diversity.

The tragedy of the human condition, according to Morris, is that our technology outpaced our biology. We are still equipped with the "stop" signals of a primate, but we have invented weapons that make those signals invisible. When you fire an arrow, pull a trigger, or drop a bomb from 30,000 feet, you cannot see the victim’s face, their trembling lip, or their submissive posture. Our built-in "safety catch" fails because it requires visual or tactile feedback to engage.

This creates a cynical reality where we aren't necessarily "more evil" than other animals—we are just more dangerous because we are "blind" to the consequences of our aggression. This primal instinct extends to our Territoriality. Whether it’s a global superpower fighting over a border, a neighbor feuding over a fence line, or a corporate drone feeling a surge of irritation because someone sat in "their" unassigned desk at the office, it’s the same ape defending the same patch of dirt. We aren't fighting for "justice" or "national sovereignty"; we are just primates who haven't learned how to share the savanna.