Republished from Upworthy at www.upworthy.com

Something fascinating happened after these male baboons died. Men should keep this in mind.

Men.

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We’re awesome.

Totally awesome.

We like sports.

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Cars.

Sports cars.

 

 

 

 

 

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And car sports.

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(We invented sh*t like this.)

So yeah, we’re pretty much the best. Cut and print.

And sure, men are responsible for a lot of really awful, terrible, messed-up things in the world.

Like war. And poison gas. And Bumfights. (Do not Google Bumfights, dear God).

But we can’t help it.

After all, we’re naturally aggressive and violent.

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(MANLY YELLING!)

And kind of thickheaded. And dominant. And emotionless.

It’s just common knowledge.

It’s how we’re wired. Biologically.

It’s in our DNA.

It all goes back to monkeys, you see?

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Because we were monkeys once. And obviously, if you were a dude monkey, you had to be the biggest, baddest, most thickheaded, most dominant monkey. Because only the biggest, baddest, most thickheaded, most dominant monkeys got to mate with the lady monkeys and produce little monkey babies, who then went on to be big, bad boy monkeys themselves. And so on and so forth.

Charles DarwinIt’s just, like, natural selection, bro. Evolution. Evolution and natural selection. (Or maybe survival of the fittest? All those things are the same, right?)  Or so we’ve been told. Except, well…

Have you ever, like, met any monkeys?

Like, some actual monkeys?

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(Actual monkeys)

Like the baboons in that picture.

Baboons and humans share about 92% of our DNA. We’re pretty close relatives. And, like humans, baboons are highly social animals. They travel in big packs called troops. And within each troop, there’s a clear hierarchy. The biggest, most aggressive males are in charge.

And they’re basically terrible jerks.

They hog all the resources. They pick on the smaller males. They mate with any female whenever, wherever they want. You know, just like you’d expect from a bunch of dude monkeys.

But here’s the thing.

One day way back in the day, biologist Robert Sapolsky was studying a particular troop of baboons. And basically, they were just going along being their normal, gross selves. Until they were hit by a nasty strain of tuberculosis.

But weirdly, it only affected certain members of the population…

Specifically, the alpha males, who all died.

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(Thus fulfilling the LiveJournal fantasies of every nerdy middle-school baboon.)

The females and the beta males? They survived.

And what’s kind of amazing is what happened next.

Click Here to watch the YouTube video and see how the males were retrained.

Basically, Sapolsky expected the troop to return to normal, with the remaining male baboons sliding into the roles of the alphas who had died.

But that didn’t happen.

Instead, the surviving male baboons were like…

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And the females were like…

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So they just decided, as a group, to chill the heck out…

…and spend a lot more time grooming and feeding one another rather than beating each other up, and just generally be more respectful of one another.

Each time a new baboon joined the troop and tried to be a violent, aggressive jerkweed, the existing members of the troop shut it down.

They developed a culture.

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(SFW!)

A culture that was different than 99% of all other baboon troops, and contrary to everything we thought we knew about them.

So where does that leave us men?

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(Men!)

Well, we’re told that we’re programmed to be just like monkeys.

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(The majesty!)

That it’s burned into our DNA. That the only way to get to the top is to be violent, aggressive, and dominant.

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(No, sir, you can’t upgrade to business class with a bunch of expired Chuck E. Cheese’s tickets.)

But it turns out that monkeys might not even be like monkeys.

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(Though chasing those giant pelican-y things sure seems like a good time).

Not like we think they are, anyway.

Not necessarily.

And no, one case study doesn’t “prove” that nurture is more important than nature or vice versa.

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(That’s not how science works, yo.)

But it does prove that we’re not fated to behave any one certain way. We’re not.

And it suggests that culture might be just as important, if not more important, than biology.

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Which is great news. Because culture, unlike biology, can change.

  About the Original Documentary:

Original documentary by National Geographic. It’s about stress, and the whole thing is pretty fascinating. You should really watch it. We found out about this incredible story on Tumblr from user theappleppielifestyle. Please go follow her. The dudes in the photo at the top are all members of the acting apprentice company at Actors Theatre of Louisville (Kentucky). Right now they’re starring in “The Glory of the World,” and if you’re in the area by some amazing coincidence, you should see it because it’s amazing (and weird, but amazing). The football photo is by Johntex, the Mercedes picture is by M 93, the sports car picture is by Ben, the NASCAR photo is by Ford Racing, the David statue photo is by Rabe!, and the test tube image is by the National Cancer Institute. All are used under Creative Commons licenses. The yelling businessman image is via Thinkstock. The picture of Charles Darwin and the picture of coins are in the public domain.