
Peace: A World History by Antony Adolf Reviewed by Scott Bowen
Antony Adolf, an independent scholar with a background as varied as history’s many points of view, opens Peace: A World History with the following citation by Ivan Bloch: “…from the year 1496 BC to 1861 of our era, that is, in a cycle of 3357 years, there were but 227 years of peace and 3130 years of war…” Such an inauspicious beginning to a work focused on the study of peace seems as daunting and antithetical as peace itself. In light of these figures, the idea of peace appears to be more of a quietly cooling ember of hope than a bastion of light for humanity. Adolf’s scholarship however, objects. With history as his backdrop, he reminds us that even in humanity’s infancy we developed a biological need for peace, and thus violence in general and war specifically became evolutionary mutations during the development of the human condition.
Adolf goes on to make hypotheses that synchronize our physical evolution with our humanistic development of war and peace respectively. “Walking upright, made possible by locking knees and a specific spinal structure, may arguably be the earliest origins of organized warfare as we know it…” By making such an argument, Adolf embraces an apparent dichotomy between evolution’s genetic chemistry for humanity’s communal benevolence and an anatomical design in preparation for conflict. And as for peace, Adolf believes that:
As Adolf locks humanity in place with these bio-genetic foundations, he moves us forward through time, beginning with the early agricultural and proto-superpower civilizations of Mesopotamia, to the dawn of international state craft with the rise of Egypt and her Western neighbors, the Greeks and Romans. With stark neutrality, he unfolds the development of religions and as they evolve from personal and/or clan effigies of early man’s mysterious surroundings to a pervading impetus to war. Through this historical narrative, mankind also reaches a new level of peace-making. The evidence lies in historical phenomena such as the Age of Reason, Jesus, the Buddha, and Mahatma Gandhi’s (among others) non-violent movements, and other philosophies that engendered conquest by words rather than by the sword. In the last century, Winston Churchill summed up this ideal through the observation that “…the empires of the future are the empires of the mind.” Adolf continues,
Spanning millennia, Antony Adolf explores—from the Fertile Crescent, to the Pax Romana, the One Hundred School in China’s dynastic period, to our present, global society—mankind’s pulse rate between times of war and a seemingly elusive peace, oppressive or otherwise. Coincidentally, it seems the proportion of scholarly material dedicated to the history of warfare and that of peace is as equally distributed as Ivan Bloch’s static of 227 years of peace and 3130 of war. With Peace: A World History, Adolf seeks to tip the scale. In an unbiased historical context and accessible discourse, Adolf’s analysis steadily makes a case not only for peace being an imperative for mankind’s survival, but one achievable through dedication and a now well-lit precedent.
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Scott Bowen currently resides in eastern North Carolina. He occupies his time writing both novel-length and short fiction concerning a prophet of his own design, playing house husband, and taking a stab at Native American crafts. He is currently working on his B.A. degree in English at East Carolina University.
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