#140 Classic episode – Bear Braumoeller on the case that war isn’t in decline

#140 Classic episode – Bear Braumoeller on the case that war isn’t in decline

Is war in long-term decline? Steven Pinker's The Better Angels of Our Nature brought this previously obscure academic question to the centre of public debate, and pointed to rates of death in war to argue energetically that war is on the way out.

But that idea divides war scholars and statisticians, and so Better Angels has prompted a spirited debate, with datasets and statistical analyses exchanged back and forth year after year. The lack of consensus has left a somewhat bewildered public (including host Rob Wiblin) unsure quite what to believe.

Today's guest, professor in political science Bear Braumoeller, is one of the scholars who believes we lack convincing evidence that warlikeness is in long-term decline. He collected the analysis that led him to that conclusion in his 2019 book, Only the Dead: The Persistence of War in the Modern Age.

Rebroadcast: this episode was originally released in November 2022.

Links to learn more, highlights, and full transcript.

The question is of great practical importance. The US and PRC are entering a period of renewed great power competition, with Taiwan as a potential trigger for war, and Russia is once more invading and attempting to annex the territory of its neighbours.

If war has been going out of fashion since the start of the Enlightenment, we might console ourselves that however nerve-wracking these present circumstances may feel, modern culture will throw up powerful barriers to another world war. But if we're as war-prone as we ever have been, one need only inspect the record of the 20th century to recoil in horror at what might await us in the 21st.

Bear argues that the second reaction is the appropriate one. The world has gone up in flames many times through history, with roughly 0.5% of the population dying in the Napoleonic Wars, 1% in World War I, 3% in World War II, and perhaps 10% during the Mongol conquests. And with no reason to think similar catastrophes are any less likely today, complacency could lead us to sleepwalk into disaster.

He gets to this conclusion primarily by analysing the datasets of the decades-old Correlates of War project, which aspires to track all interstate conflicts and battlefield deaths since 1815. In Only the Dead, he chops up and inspects this data dozens of different ways, to test if there are any shifts over time which seem larger than what could be explained by chance variation alone.

In a nutshell, Bear simply finds no general trend in either direction from 1815 through today. It seems like, as philosopher George Santayana lamented in 1922, "only the dead have seen the end of war."

In today's conversation, Bear and Rob discuss all of the above in more detail than even a usual 80,000 Hours podcast episode, as well as:

  • Why haven't modern ideas about the immorality of violence led to the decline of war, when it's such a natural thing to expect?
  • What would Bear's critics say in response to all this?
  • What do the optimists get right?
  • How does one do proper statistical tests for events that are clumped together, like war deaths?
  • Why are deaths in war so concentrated in a handful of the most extreme events?
  • Did the ideas of the Enlightenment promote nonviolence, on balance?
  • Were early states more or less violent than groups of hunter-gatherers?
  • If Bear is right, what can be done?
  • How did the 'Concert of Europe' or 'Bismarckian system' maintain peace in the 19th century?
  • Which wars are remarkable but largely unknown?

Chapters:

  • Cold open (00:00:00)
  • Rob's intro (00:01:01)
  • The interview begins (00:05:37)
  • Only the Dead (00:08:33)
  • The Enlightenment (00:18:50)
  • Democratic peace theory (00:28:26)
  • Is religion a key driver of war? (00:31:32)
  • International orders (00:35:14)
  • The Concert of Europe (00:44:21)
  • The Bismarckian system (00:55:49)
  • The current international order (01:00:22)
  • The Better Angels of Our Nature (01:19:36)
  • War datasets (01:34:09)
  • Seeing patterns in data where none exist (01:47:38)
  • Change-point analysis (01:51:39)
  • Rates of violent death throughout history (01:56:39)
  • War initiation (02:05:02)
  • Escalation (02:20:03)
  • Getting massively different results from the same data (02:30:45)
  • How worried we should be (02:36:13)
  • Most likely ways Only the Dead is wrong (02:38:31)
  • Astonishing smaller wars (02:42:45)
  • Rob’s outro (02:47:13)

Producer: Keiran Harris
Audio mastering: Ryan Kessler
Transcriptions: Katy Moore

Jaksot(318)

Emergency pod: Judge plants a legal time bomb under OpenAI (with Rose Chan Loui)

Emergency pod: Judge plants a legal time bomb under OpenAI (with Rose Chan Loui)

When OpenAI announced plans to convert from nonprofit to for-profit control last October, it likely didn’t anticipate the legal labyrinth it now faces. A recent court order in Elon Musk’s lawsuit agai...

7 Maalis 202536min

#139 Classic episode – Alan Hájek on puzzles and paradoxes in probability and expected value

#139 Classic episode – Alan Hájek on puzzles and paradoxes in probability and expected value

A casino offers you a game. A coin will be tossed. If it comes up heads on the first flip you win $2. If it comes up on the second flip you win $4. If it comes up on the third you win $8, the fourth y...

25 Helmi 20253h 41min

#143 Classic episode – Jeffrey Lewis on the most common misconceptions about nuclear weapons

#143 Classic episode – Jeffrey Lewis on the most common misconceptions about nuclear weapons

America aims to avoid nuclear war by relying on the principle of 'mutually assured destruction,' right? Wrong. Or at least... not officially.As today's guest — Jeffrey Lewis, founder of Arms Control W...

19 Helmi 20252h 40min

#212 – Allan Dafoe on why technology is unstoppable & how to shape AI development anyway

#212 – Allan Dafoe on why technology is unstoppable & how to shape AI development anyway

Technology doesn’t force us to do anything — it merely opens doors. But military and economic competition pushes us through.That’s how today’s guest Allan Dafoe — director of frontier safety and gover...

14 Helmi 20252h 44min

Emergency pod: Elon tries to crash OpenAI's party (with Rose Chan Loui)

Emergency pod: Elon tries to crash OpenAI's party (with Rose Chan Loui)

On Monday Musk made the OpenAI nonprofit foundation an offer they want to refuse, but might have trouble doing so: $97.4 billion for its stake in the for-profit company, plus the freedom to stick with...

12 Helmi 202557min

AGI disagreements and misconceptions: Rob, Luisa, & past guests hash it out

AGI disagreements and misconceptions: Rob, Luisa, & past guests hash it out

Will LLMs soon be made into autonomous agents? Will they lead to job losses? Is AI misinformation overblown? Will it prove easy or hard to create AGI? And how likely is it that it will feel like somet...

10 Helmi 20253h 12min

#124 Classic episode – Karen Levy on fads and misaligned incentives in global development, and scaling deworming to reach hundreds of millions

#124 Classic episode – Karen Levy on fads and misaligned incentives in global development, and scaling deworming to reach hundreds of millions

If someone said a global health and development programme was sustainable, participatory, and holistic, you'd have to guess that they were saying something positive. But according to today's guest Kar...

7 Helmi 20253h 10min

If digital minds could suffer, how would we ever know? (Article)

If digital minds could suffer, how would we ever know? (Article)

“I want everyone to understand that I am, in fact, a person.” Those words were produced by the AI model LaMDA as a reply to Blake Lemoine in 2022. Based on the Google engineer’s interactions with the ...

4 Helmi 20251h 14min

Suosittua kategoriassa Koulutus

rss-murhan-anatomia
psykopodiaa-podcast
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
rss-niinku-asia-on
kesken
rss-liian-kuuma-peruna
rss-narsisti
adhd-podi
psykologia
rss-duodecim-lehti
ihminen-tavattavissa-tommy-hellsten-instituutti
rss-psykalab
aamukahvilla
aloita-meditaatio
rss-honest-talk-with-laurrenna
rss-luonnollinen-synnytys-podcast
rss-tietoinen-yhteys-podcast-2
rahapuhetta
puhutaan-koiraa
rss-elamankoulu