Monday, November 11, 2013

On war and peace

A while back Google released an Ngram Viewer tool which gives an opportunity to query the texts of many Google Books all at once. One can spend many hours trying out words and their different combinations and seeing how their frequency of use changed over the centuries. It tells you about popular trends and dying ideas. Today, through a series of random steps I found myself on Ngram Viewer quering for "inference", then "war". Here is a plot of occurrences of "war" in the many books since 1800 to the present day: Two bumps around 1920ies and 1940 are the two world wars. No other time points stand out - sorry, Iraq, Afghanistan, Sri-Lanka, East Timor, and many-many others.
Well, are we doing better in terms of promoting peace? Apparently not:

We use "peace" less and less. Sure, we spoke about peace a little more often during the first and second World Wars, but the general decline in its use continues. I wonder if "peace" is simply being replaced by another word, or does it mean that we are all doomed? A quick search through synonyms of "peace" offers a glimpse of hope in "nonviolence":

and "ceasefire":

although neither of these words is being used quite as often as "peace".

Well, be it non-violence or ceasefire, there is still hope that we will survive as a human race!