Historical Overview of Warfare
From tribal raids to world wars, organized violence has recurred throughout history. In many prehistoric and tribal societies, war occurred sporadically over basic needs and honor. Archaeological evidence suggests that early hunter‑gatherers often lived largely at peace ; complex, frequent warfare appears only after settled agriculture, larger populations and social stratification emerged . In Amazonian tribes, for example, up to 30% of all deaths were due to raids and feuds before European contact, driven by revenge, honor, territory, and jealousy . As one anthropologist notes, “the same reasons – revenge, honor, territory and jealousy over women – that fueled deadly conflicts in the Amazon continue to drive violence in today’s world.” . These motives echo broadly in tribal warfare: disputes over resources or status, blood feuds, and the need to deter future attacks often spurred violence in small-scale societies.
As civilizations grew, war became organized by states and empires. Ancient empires (Egyptian, Mesopotamian, Chinese, Greek, Roman, etc.) fielded armies to conquer neighbors for land, tribute and glory. Warfare was institutionalized as state policy – “war is a mere continuation of policy by other means,” as Clausewitz summarized the relationship between politics and battle . Imperial conquests often had ideological or religious justifications (e.g. “civilizing” missions or divine mandates). The 13th‑century Mongol invasions, which created the largest contiguous land empire ever, exemplify this scale of conquest: historians regard the Mongol devastation as one of the deadliest episodes in history . Entire regions were depopulated as cities resisting the Mongols were destroyed , showing how state-directed war could reach unparalleled ferocity.
In the medieval and early modern period (c. 500–1500+ AD), warfare continued through feudal conflicts, crusades and technological change. European power struggles (e.g. the Crusades, Hundred Years’ War, Ottoman sieges) mixed religion and politics. Gunpowder and naval advances later enabled even wider conquests (e.g. Spanish and Portuguese colonization of the Americas, 15th–17th c.). Colonial expansion from the 1500s onward greatly intensified warfare worldwide: as one historian observes, European colonization “generated much more war” by pitting peoples against each other over land, trade and slaves . Resistance to imperialism and rivalry between colonial powers fueled continuous global conflict through the 18th and 19th centuries (e.g. the Napoleonic Wars, Scramble for Africa).
In the modern era (20th century to today), war has reached unprecedented scale and destructiveness. Industrialized nation‑states fought total wars (World Wars I–II) driven by complex mixes of nationalism, ideology, and resource competition. The Cold War spawned numerous proxy wars, and new threats (nuclear weapons, insurgency) emerged. Today an estimated 50+ active conflicts rage worldwide – the highest count since World War II . These include interstate wars (e.g. Russia–Ukraine), sectarian or ethnic wars (e.g. Middle East, Balkans), and global terrorism. (See Table 1 below for a summary of motivations by era.)
Era Example Conflicts Motivations/Characteristics
Tribal/Prehistory Amazonian tribal raids; Yanomami warfare Territory and resource disputes; revenge and honor codes; bridewealth and jealousy issues . Warfare rare in low-density, nomadic groups; rises with settled agriculture and chiefs .
Ancient/Empires (–500 AD) Roman conquests, Greek–Persian Wars, Alexander’s campaigns Imperial expansion for tribute and security; dynastic claims; religious or “civilizing” ideology. War seen as statecraft (Clausewitz: policy by other means ).
Medieval (500–1500) Crusades, Mongol invasions, Hundred Years’ War Feudal/dynastic rivalries; religious holy wars; nomadic invasions (Mongols devastated Eurasia ). Chivalric honor and codes influenced conduct.
Colonial/Imperial (1500–1900) Spanish conquest of Americas; African colonization; Napoleonic Wars Resource extraction (gold, spices, land); national prestige and balance-of-power; racial/mercantilist ideologies. European empires forcibly redrew global maps (colonial wars “generated much more war” ).
Modern (1900–present) World Wars I–II, Cold War conflicts, Middle East wars, Ukraine (2022–) Nationalism and ethnicity; competing ideologies (fascism, communism, religious movements); economic and strategic interests (oil, territory). Total war with civilian mobilization; nuclear deterrence limits but does not eliminate war .
Psychological Perspectives on Violence
Evolutionary and Biological Factors
Many psychologists and anthropologists view war as rooted in evolution. The Male Warrior Hypothesis posits that human brains evolved under pressure of inter-group conflicts, especially among males. Our psychology is biased to form coalitions and to rapidly distinguish “us” vs. “them” . Ancestrally, men who succeeded in group violence gained resources or mates, so humans today tend to favor in-group members and feel suspicion or aggression toward outsiders . Even infants show in-group favoritism (preferring similar others) , and chimpanzees – our close relatives – conduct “coalition-based warfare” over territory . These findings suggest a biological predisposition toward group conflict.
At the level of individual drives, Freudian theory invoked an innate aggressive instinct. Freud’s concept of the “death drive” (Thanatos) describes a compulsion to destroy and return to a lifeless state. He argued this impulse is expressed outwardly as violence: “[the death drive] express[es] itself… as a drive of destruction directed against the external world” . In other words, humans harbor an instinctual energy that can be channeled into aggression. Freud further noted that redirecting this death-instinct outward could explain why people fight or kill: “redirection of the death instinct outwards is the source of aggression” . Though controversial, this theory underscores the idea of deep-seated drives underpinning violent behavior.
Social and Cultural Factors
Beyond biology, social psychology highlights how group dynamics and authority amplify violence. Humans naturally form strong in-groups; laboratory studies show even minimal group cues (e.g. shirt color, painting preference) provoke favoritism and prejudice against others . As the LSE Psychology blog notes, “From infancy, we favour our in-group and distrust outsiders, suggesting that conflict is hardwired into us.” . Once mobilized for war, soldiers undergo powerful transformations: strict hierarchies and uniforms create an agentic shift that lets individuals obey orders without personal guilt. Classic studies (Milgram’s experiments) demonstrated that ordinary people will inflict harm if an authority figure assures responsibility . In war, de-individuation (anonymity in the crowd) and lethal stress further diminish normal inhibitions.
Social norms and leadership play a key role. During conflict, violence becomes morally sanctioned: attacking the enemy is glorified while dissent is punished. Indeed, war often becomes a collective endeavor rather than isolated aggression. As one analysis emphasizes, in war “violence against the out-group becomes a social norm” and in-group members enforce conformity . Cultural narratives (propaganda, ideology, “us vs. them” framing) harden these biases. In sum, psychology suggests humans evolved with in-built group loyalties and aggression, and social structures (norms, obedience, identity) can amplify or direct these impulses into large-scale warfare .
Philosophical and Cultural Interpretations
Over centuries, thinkers have interpreted war in moral and political terms. Thomas Hobbes famously argued that without strong government “nothing could be unjust” because society in a pre-political state of nature would be “a war… of every man against every man,” where life is “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” . In Hobbes’s view, war is humanity’s baseline condition, overcome only by social contract. Centuries later, Carl von Clausewitz conceptualized war strategically: he asserted war is “not merely a political act, but a true political instrument… a mere continuation of policy by other means.” . Clausewitz thus linked violence directly to state goals, suggesting that combat serves rational political ends. Friedrich Nietzsche offered a different angle, valorizing conflict. He declared that “danger, war, are as valuable as… peace; great individuals appear only in times of danger and violence” . Nietzsche saw struggle as the crucible for excellence and growth, downplaying pacifism as a herd mentality. These philosophical views span pessimism (Hobbes), realism (Clausewitz) and affirmation (Nietzsche) of war’s role in human affairs.
Religions and cultures also frame warfare. Medieval Christian thinkers like Augustine and Aquinas developed Just-War theory to morally constrain violence. Augustine argued that rulers sometimes “wage war in obedience to divine command” for justice, insisting that “no war is undertaken by a good state except on behalf of good faith or for safety.” . In contrast, some traditions sanctify combat: the Hindu Bhagavad Gita portrays the hero Arjuna’s struggle as a duty-bound “dharma-yuddha” (righteous war). Krishna urges Arjuna to overcome his hesitation, saying that as a warrior he must fight to uphold duty (even promising heaven to the slain) . Likewise, Islam’s doctrine of jihad historically includes both spiritual striving and (in classical jurisprudence) legitimate armed defense of the community . Cultural codes can glorify martial honor: Japan’s Bushidō ethic, for example, stressed loyalty, courage, and “honour unto death.” Under Bushidō, a samurai who lost honor could only regain it through ritual suicide . These religious and cultural systems show how societies may legitimize or restrain war: from strict moral rules (targeting innocents prohibited in jihad) to exaltation of warrior virtues (as in Bushidō).
Thinker/Tradition View on War and Violence
Aristotle (4th c BC) War should only be for self-defense; military strength is justified to avoid slavery, not to subjugate others .
Augustine (5th c AD) War may be necessary to punish evil and defend the innocent, but must have right intention and authority. “No war is undertaken by a good state except on behalf of good faith or for safety” .
Thomas Hobbes (1651) In the natural state there is perpetual war of “every man against every man”; life without social order is “nasty, brutish, and short,” prompting the need for an absolute sovereign .
Clauseswitz (1830s) War is simply the extension of politics by other means, an instrument of state policy .
Friedrich Nietzsche (1880s) Conflict and struggle are creative forces: “danger, war… are as valuable as… peace; great individuals appear only in times of… violence.” This reflects his will-to-power ethic.
Bhagavad Gita (Hinduism) Righteous war (dharma-yuddha) is a moral duty for the warrior class. Arjuna is told abandoning duty is sin: “If you are killed, you shall reach heaven; if you triumph, you shall enjoy the earth… firm in your resolve, to fight!” .
Jihad (Islamic tradition) Jihad broadly means striving in God’s path. Islamic texts sanction armed struggle defensively, as self-protection or against tyranny; classical “sword verses” were interpreted to permit offensive war against pagan aggression .
Bushidō (Samurai code) A moral code emphasizing honor, loyalty and martial excellence. It taught that a warrior must be willing to die for duty: failure brings shame only remediable by ritual suicide .
Notable Examples of Conflict
• Amazonian tribes (pre-Columbian): Before European contact, inter-tribal raids were common. Anthropologist Robert Walker found 30% of deaths in these tribes were war-related , often over women, revenge or territory. Such figures underscore that even “stone-age” societies could be intensely warlike under certain conditions.
• Classical Greece and Rome: City-states frequently fought (e.g. the Peloponnesian War) over honor and power; philosophers like Thucydides noted fear and pride as war causes. Alexander the Great’s empire-building and Rome’s imperial wars show how ancient states used conquest for wealth and glory.
• Mongol Conquests (13th C.): Genghis Khan’s armies swept Eurasia, creating the largest contiguous empire ever. The campaigns were extraordinarily bloody – resisting cities were destroyed and populations slaughtered. Historians note the Mongol invasions as among history’s deadliest conflicts .
• Religious Wars (Medieval Europe/Middle East): The Crusades (11th–13th centuries) pitted Christian and Muslim states in multi-front holy wars, mixing faith with politics. Similarly, Ottoman wars (e.g. Siege of Vienna, 1529) epitomized religious-ideological clash. In Asia, conflicts like the Muslim conquests or Hindu–Muslim wars exemplify faith-driven strife.
• Age of Empires (1500–1800): European powers fought global wars. Hernán Cortés’s defeat of the Aztec Empire (1519–1521) was driven by gold, land and conversion. The 19th-century “Scramble for Africa” saw Britain, France, and others wage wars to seize colonies and resources. Ferguson observes that after 1500 even indigenous peoples were drawn into more warfare due to European expansion .
• World Wars (20th Century): WWI (1914–18) and WWII (1939–45) were total wars involving dozens of nations. Nationalism, alliances and imperial rivalry sparked WWI; economic collapse and fascist/communist ideologies fueled WWII. The casualties and destruction made these conflicts watershed events in human history.
• Modern Conflicts (21st Century): Numerous local and regional wars persist. For instance, the Russian invasion of Ukraine (2022–) combines ethnic, strategic and political motives. Civil wars in Syria, Afghanistan and elsewhere often involve sectarian animosity and competition for resources. Terrorist networks (e.g. ISIS) wage ideological warfare globally. Overall, analysts note over 50 active conflicts worldwide today – “the highest number since WWII” – indicating that humanity’s warlike impulses remain potent even in an interconnected age.
Implications for Modern Society
The “war drive” that served prehistoric survival still influences today’s world. Many societies remain organized along tribal/ethnic lines, and leaders can exploit fear of outsiders to justify violence. At the same time, modern institutions and culture challenge this drive. Globalization, mass media and international law blur group distinctions: some scholars speculate that a shared global culture could “finally offer a path to peace” . Efforts at global identity and cooperation (e.g. the United Nations, human-rights movements) seek to counteract tribalism. For example, promoting a “shared sense of humanity” has been suggested as a way to reduce conflict .
Culturally, alternative outlets for aggression exist. Anthropologists point out that many tribal impulses are redirected into sports or games: “sports and video games often involve the same impulses to defeat a rival group” . These activities can serve as safety valves for combative instincts. Meanwhile, the sheer destructiveness of modern weapons (especially nuclear arms) has made full-scale wars existentially dangerous. This has arguably imposed self-restraints on states: mutual deterrence and international norms discourage (though not eliminate) outright aggression.
Nevertheless, challenges persist. Rapid ideological shifts, economic inequalities, and breakdowns in social trust can reignite conflict. Technological change (cyber warfare, drones, misinformation) has created new battlefields and dilemmas. In sum, psychological research suggests that while warlike drives are deeply rooted, whether they dominate the future depends on education, institutions, and culture. As one observer notes, if humanity can view itself “as one unified group working towards common global goals,” it may curtail the cycles of violence that have long characterized our history .
Sources: Scholarly works and historical accounts were consulted, including analyses of tribal violence , classical philosophy , modern social psychology , and religious texts . These sources illustrate the complex motivations and interpretations of war across time.