Contemporary gorilla DNA is 97.7% compared with humans, while contemporary chimpanzees and bonobos DNA are about 98.7% identical to humans, it is not important genetically close to humans. Instead, local people get all the important food as long as salaries are paid to hunters. I believe that the explanation of Peterson is enough to understand how the monkey is treated - regardless of whether it is dead or alive, these pictures are more shocking. Initially, I skipped these pictures, but they helped make Peterson's words a reality.
The image of "violent male envy" often appears in the discussion of human violence. Dale Peterson and Richard Wranghamin's "The Devil 's Man: The Origin of Human Violence and Human Violence" states that violence is not inevitable but is inherent to man. But William L. Ury, editor of the book titled "From the Battlefield to the Campus - a New Perspective on Violent Conflict and Prevention" criticizes the book's "killer" myth Harvard did. The conclusion of the law school seminar is that "there are still many natural cooperative mechanisms that can control conflict, lead invasion, and overcome conflicts, which are as natural as aggressive tendencies . "
* Demon Male: The Origin of Hearing Impairment and Human Violence, Dale Peterson), Richard Wrangham, Sailor Books; (November 14, 1997). If you doubt that a man is a sneaky barbarian, this book is for you. Authors Wrangham and Peterson will confirm your intuition. Violent social behavior is deeply rooted in male human genes and proved to be common to relatives of our closest male primates. Both rape, beating and killing are part of Gorilla's life, scorpion between us. The author tries to summarize optimistic hollow memos, but their science reveals the dark side of human nature. -
Humans spend less time on this planet. We evolved from an apes hundreds of years ago. People always live with the power of nature as a part, not as a part of nature. Our ancestors were unable to eat more than they could find nearby. If the correct nutrients are in the local soil and in an appropriate climate, they can only cultivate the crops. People's activities always involve shaping the surrounding natural forces. They changed the environment, for example by planting crops by cutting forest fields, taming wildlife to food, and building shelters. A region of the world that is often seen as a wild natural landscape is actually a product of human activity for centuries.