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Social-Emotional Origins of Violence: A Theory of Multiple Killing

NCJ Number
236935
Journal
Aggression and Violent Behavior Volume: 16 Issue: 6 Dated: November/December 2011 Pages: 453-460
Author(s)
Thomas J. Scheff
Date Published
December 2011
Length
8 pages
Annotation
This essay outlines a cybernetic theory of violence, supporting and extending earlier studies, particularly Gilligan and Websdale.
Abstract
This essay outlines a cybernetic theory of violence, supporting and extending earlier studies, particularly Gilligan and Websdale. It spells out recursive, interactive processes of alienation and emotion. The theory proposes that most violence is caused by the interaction between alienation and what Gilligan called secret shame, shame about shame. Recursion need not stop in one round: there may be no natural limit for the resultant spirals. A chain reaction of vengefulness, a shame/anger derivative, can be produced in this way. Two spirals are described: shame/rage and shame/shame. Studies and accounts of multiple killings offer preliminary support. The idea may be applicable to collective behavior also, such as gratuitous wars. Websdale's cases of calmly planned familicide seem particularly relevant to the origins of wars, such as WWI, in which vengeance seems to have played a major part. It would appear that the humiliation-revenge cycle is the most dangerous element in human existence. The last section offers some tentative first steps toward decreasing violence. To the extent that the theory proposed here is true, one faces the dilemma of how to present it to a civilization in which the social-emotional world is virtually invisible. (Published Abstract)

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