• Source: Law of the jungle
    • "The law of the jungle" (also called jungle law) is an expression that has come to describe a scenario where "anything goes". The Oxford English Dictionary defines the Law of the Jungle as "the code of survival in jungle life, now usually with reference to the superiority of brute force or self-interest in the struggle for survival".
      The phrase was introduced in Rudyard Kipling's 1894 work The Jungle Book, where it described the behaviour of wolves in a pack.


      The Jungle Book


      In his 1894 novel The Jungle Book, Rudyard Kipling uses the term to describe an actual set of legal codes used by wolves and other animals in the jungles of India. Chapter Two of The Second Jungle Book (1895) includes a poem featuring the Law of the Jungle, as known to the wolves and taught to their offspring. It begins:

      In the 1994 film The Jungle Book, the jungle law is portrayed as a decree forbidding the killing of animals for reasons outside of one's own survival, such as gluttony or sport. The law is maintained by Shere Khan, the jungle's "royal keeper" and protector, who kills anyone who has violated it.
      In the 2016 Disney remake of their 1967 animated film The Jungle Book, itself based on the novel, the wolves' poem is described by Baloo as a piece of propaganda.


      See also



      Anarchism
      Evolutionary psychology
      Natural law
      State of nature
      Stateless society
      Social Darwinism
      Survival of the fittest
      The Wild West
      Callicles
      Might makes right


      References




      External links



      The Second Jungle Book at Project Gutenberg

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