Formal net
Includes only formulated ideas, i.e. Questions, Hypotheses, Predictions, and Observations
Generalizes to
Changes in self-understanding of human nature can change the collective behaviors of humans.
For most people, does a new understanding of human nature actually change our behaviors? E.g. We came to understand that evolution made us care more about our own children than our neighbors'. Will that understanding change our behavior? What if we come to understand that evolution made us prone to hate people from outside groups? What does history tell us about this?
74.3%
Infers
Collectively self-understanding of intergroup aggression as an evolutionary mismatch can change intergroup ...(10 more characters.)
If intergroup aggression has a biological foundation (possibly resulted from cultural group selection and cultural genome co-evolution), it's more than likely already an evolutionary mismatch. The understanding of intergroup aggression as an evolutionary mismatch just like preference over sugar and fat might change intergroup aggression.