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"Evolution
of Weaponry"
The
Role of Weapons' Evolution in Domestic Violent Crime
Weapons
play the same role in domestic violent crime as in war.
The resistance to killing also exists in peacetime, and
weapons provide psychological and mechanical leverage to
enable killing in peace as well as in war.
Weapons'
Lethality
Weapons' lethality (in peace and war) is a factor of the
effectiveness of the weapons used to kill and of the ability
of available medical technology to save lives. Thus, weapons'
lethality can be thought of as a contest between weapons'
effectiveness (the state of technology trying to kill you)
and medical effectiveness (the state of technology trying
to save you). Like weapons' lethality, the difference between
murder (killing someone) and aggravated assault (trying
to kill someone) is also largely a factor of the effectiveness
of available weapons vs the effectiveness of available medical
life-saving technology.
Advances
in Weapons' Effectiveness
Throughout most of human history the effectiveness of weapons
available for domestic violence was basically stable, a
relative constant. The relative effectiveness of swords,
axes, and blunt objects has been basically unchanged, and
killing (as an act of passion vs a pre-meditated act like
poisoning or leaving a bomb) was only possible at close-range
by stabbing, hacking, and beating.
Bows
were kept unstrung, not in a state of readiness for an act
of passion. It required premeditation plus training plus
strength to kill with a bow. Early, muzzle-loading gunpowder
weapons were also often not kept in a state of readiness.
It required time, training, and premeditation to load and
shoot such a weapon. Once loaded, the humidity in the air
could seep into the gunpowder and the load could become
unreliable. Only in the late 19th century, with widespread
introduction of breech-loading, brass cartridges was a true
act of passion possible with state-of-the-art weapons technology.
Powerful weapons could now be kept in state of readiness
(i.e., loaded), and they now required minimal strength or
training to use. This achievement in weapons effectiveness
has been virtually unchanged since the 1870s. Colt's revolver
or a double-barrel shotgun is basically equally effective
to any small arms available today (Table I).
TABLE
I: Landmarks in the Evolution of Weapons Effectiveness
| ca. 1700 B.C. |
Chariots provide key form of mobility
advantage in ancient warfare |
| ca. 400 B.C. |
Greek phalanx |
| ca. 100 B.C. |
Roman system (pilum, swords, training,
professionalism, leadership) |
| ca. 900 A.D. |
Mounted knight (stirrup greatly enhances
utility of mounted warfare) |
| ca. 1350 |
Gunpowder (cannon) in warfare (Battle
of Crecy, 1346) |
| ca. 1400 |
Widespread application of long bow defeats
mounted knights ( Battle of Agincourt, I4I5) |
| ca. 1600 |
Gunpowder (small arms) in warfare, defeats
aIl body armor (30 Years War & English Civil War) |
| ca. 1800 |
Shrapnel (exploding artillery shells),
ultimately creates renewed need for helmets (ca. 1915)
|
| ca. 1850 |
Percussion caps permit all-weather use
of small arms |
| ca. 1870 |
Breech loading, cartridge firing rifles,
and pistolsª |
| ca. 1915 |
Machine gun |
| ca. 1915 |
Gas warfare |
| ca. 1915 |
Tanks |
| ca. 1915 |
Aircraft |
| ca. 1915 |
Self-loading (automatic) rifles and pistols |
| ca. 1940 |
Strategic bombing of population centers |
| ca. 1945 |
Nuclear weapons |
| ca. 1960 |
Large scale introduction of operant conditioning
in training to enable killing in soldiers |
| ca. 1960 |
Large-scale introduction of media violence
begins to enable domestic violent crimeª |
| ca. 1970 |
Precision guided munitions |
| ca. 1980 |
Kevlar provides first individual armor
to defeat state-of-the-art projectiles in 300+ years |
Note:
Dates generally represent century or decade of first major,
large-scale introduction.
ª Represents developments influencing domestic violent crime.
Thus,
the effectiveness of weapons available for domestic violence
has remained relatively stable throughout most of human
history. It then made one huge quantum leap in the late
19th century and then has not moved since, with the sole
exception of the psychological conditioning to enable killing.
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