User:Citmoreno9/Killer ape theory

Lead
The theory gained notoriety for suggesting that the urge to do violence was a fundamental part of human psychology. The hunting hypothesis is often associated with the theory, because of similarities and because Robert Ardrey developed both. However, both chimpanzees and bonobos have been observed to exhibit aggressive behaviors over 100 times more often than humans.Killer ape theory

The theory holds many branches on to what kind of violence it was, one-on-one or was violence enacted as a cooperation among different groups. One group versus the other. The theory of the killer ape brings in the evolution of bipedalism and why humans evolved. Many believe the primary reason we evolved to bipedalism was due to learn how to run and energy efficiency. The primary reason to evolving to bipedalism was for the reason to use our forward limbs. The killer ape theory points out as well that violence was a driving factor to bipedalism, the use of our upper limbs to hold tools and use weapons is seemed to be caused by the act of violence.

Article body
The expression "killer ape" does not mean an outstanding aggressive kind of ape; in fact, the term refers to anthropological analysis of human aggression. Accordingly, the killer ape is a notably belligerent species on which our instincts might be rooted, because this very ancestor could establish itself due to its special aggression. Killer ape theory

A theory amongst the killer ape came about in the 1970's. Creatures of Cain: The Hunt for Human Nature in Cold War America by she briefly mentions how some research put the theory of the killer ape in spectacles, "Then, in the 1970s, the theory unraveled altogether when primatologists discovered that chimpanzees also kill members of their own species". The knowledge of chimpanzees attacking their own species correlates to todays ideals of human violence. Are we violent to each other due to our nature or due to circumstances. they break down if the interpretation of the killer ape theory. "Gentle savage or bloodthirsty brute”, hunter or hunted, hunter or scavenger, violence or cooperation..." the human race today is like a game of cat and mouse as Hart and Sussman try to distinguish.

The association of intraspecies and interspecies violence with a quantum leap in human evolution can be seen in the opening sequence of 2001: A Space Odyssey. Killer ape theory

one of the scenes shows apes acting violent upon another ape. In this scene the surrounding apes are throwing objects to the one ape in the middle. This scene is one indicator that theorises that primate evolved to bipedalism due to the fact of holding and utilizing weapons and tools. The fact of chimpanzees attacking their own species, even killing them sometimes, is played out in the film. All the apes look alike but they all come together to attack one member by throwing them rocks and other objects, indicating the push for bipedalism in the human evolution.

Lead
The theory gained notoriety for suggesting that the urge to do violence was a fundamental part of human psychology. The hunting hypothesis is often associated with the theory, because of similarities and because Robert Ardrey developed both. However, both chimpanzees and bonobos have been observed to exhibit aggressive behaviors over 100 times more often than humans.Killer ape theory

''The theory holds many branches on to what kind of violence it was, one-on-one or was violence enacted as a cooperation among different groups. One group versus the other. The theory of the killer ape brings in the evolution of bipedalism and why humans evolved. Many believe the primary reason we evolved to bipedalism was due to learn how to run and energy efficiency. The primary reason to evolving to bipedalism was for the reason to use our forward limbs. The killer ape theory points out as well that violence was a driving factor to bipedalism, the use of our upper limbs to hold tools and use weapons is seemed to be caused by the act of violence.''

Article body
The expression "killer ape" does not mean an outstanding aggressive kind of ape; in fact, the term refers to anthropological analysis of human aggression. Accordingly, the killer ape is a notably belligerent species on which our instincts might be rooted, because this very ancestor could establish itself due to its special aggression. Killer ape theory

''A theory amongst the killer ape came about in the 1970's. Creatures of Cain: The Hunt for Human Nature in Cold War America by she briefly mentions how some research put the theory of the killer ape in spectacles, "Then, in the 1970s, the theory unraveled altogether when primatologists discovered that chimpanzees also kill members of their own species". The knowledge of chimpanzees attacking their own species correlates to todays ideals of human violence. Are we violent to each other due to our nature or due to circumstances. they break down if the interpretation of the killer ape theory. "Gentle savage or bloodthirsty brute”, hunter or hunted, hunter or scavenger, violence or cooperation..." the human race today is like a game of cat and mouse as Hart and Sussman try to distinguish.''

The association of intraspecies and interspecies violence with a quantum leap in human evolution can be seen in the opening sequence of 2001: A Space Odyssey. Killer ape theory

'' one of the scenes shows apes acting violent upon another ape. In this scene the surrounding apes are throwing objects to the one ape in the middle. This scene is one indicator that theorises that primate evolved to bipedalism due to the fact of holding and utilizing weapons and tools. The fact of chimpanzees attacking their own species, even killing them sometimes, is played out in the film. All the apes look alike but they all come together to attack one member by throwing them rocks and other objects, indicating the push for bipedalism in the human evolution.''