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World War III: Why Humans Can't Have World Peace

Humanities Circumferencing Predisposition to Warfare

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World War III: Why Humans Can't Have World Peace

By: Nicholas Ishak
Narrated by: Stephen Totemeier
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About this listen

At this point, all we can do is hope that we will all one day find happiness by doing what we know to be good, which is possibly subterfuge, paying penance for our inhumanities, the mistakes it takes to grow as a person, as people, evolve as a species. Some are mechanized as sheer predators, and others as sheer prey. Life, all life, seeks to survive. The mechanics of the mind is why we go to war. We are built to survive, love, feel, kill, eat, prey, and play. The cosmic recipe of our existence copulates the need for war. The day we no longer need war to progress as a species is when we will no longer be human.

Let's begin the trip down this rabbit hole with an obvious but subtle reason for war. We’ve known of this concept since our forever, but it psychologically began to blow up in 1915 because of a publication called “Bodily Changes in Pain, Hunger, Fear, and Rage” by Walter Bradford Cannon. Fear triggers our survivalism, or, as it is commonly broken down, flight or fight. This seemingly sequential occurrence that happens instantly plays a significant role in the human species' reason for war. However, note that there is no one reason but a camouflage of colors that paint our battlefields red.

©2023 Nicholas Ishak (P)2024 First Pragma LLC
Sociology War
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