Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Pass the Peace Pipe: Difference between revisions

From Very Bad Wiki
m 1 revision imported
m Text replacement - "VBW_Episode_InfoBox" to "Episode_Infobox"
Line 1: Line 1:
{{VBW_Episode_InfoBox
{{Episode_Infobox
| title = Pass the Peace Pipe
| title = Pass the Peace Pipe
| caption =  
| caption =  

Revision as of 16:54, 17 March 2026


Pass the Peace Pipe is the 298th episode of the Very Bad Wizards podcast, released on December 10, 2024. The opening segment is a discussion on . The main segment is a discussion on . The preroll contains the standard disclaimer and theme_music.

Opening Quote


Show Notes

Why do we punish people? How did our punishment practices evolve and what is their primary function? David and Tamler talk about a new paper that examines punitive justice in three small-scale societies - the Kiowa equestrian foragers in late 19th century North America, Mentawai horticulturalists in Indonesia, and Nuer pastoralists. The authors challenge the dominant view of punishment as a means of norm enforcement arguing instead that its main function is reconciliation, restoring cooperative relationships, and preventing further violence. Get ready for runaway pigs, peace pipes, wife stealing, banana stealing, black magic, leopard-skin chiefs, and David maybe finally coming around to restorative justice. Plus we choose from a long list of fantastic topic suggestions from our beloved Patreon supporters and narrow down to six finalists for the listener selected episode. Fitouchi, L., & Singh, M. (2023). Punitive justice serves to restore reciprocal cooperation in three small-scale societies. Evolution and Human Behavior, 44(5), 502-514. Third-party punishment [wikipedia.org]