I've always presumed, maybe incorrectly, that states were a consequence of increase of population size and density, and the need for specialisation that creates. If you're are relatively small group of people, you don't need and can't really afford someone who occupies himself solely with ruling. — ChatteringMonkey
I don't think that is necessarily incorrect, though I am not an expert. From what I have read it seems as though states are inherently based exclusively on sedentary agriculture (and imports for anything else not available).
The domestication of humans in cities resulted in "de-skilling" them. Instead of knowing numerous ways to to hunt, gather, swidden, harvest, fish, etc, humans know how to do only a handful of things, how to raise only a few crops (wheat, millet, rice, oats - the cereals), and raise only a few animals (pigs, cows, sheep, etc).
If for environmental conditions (or whatever) you find yourself exclusively relying upon sedentary agricultural practices amongst many other people, I think you will need something like a state to keep things organized.
Agriculture requires a lot more intensive and extensive cooperative labor than hunting and gathering. The cycles of nature produced sufficient food for hunting and gathering. Both lifestyles require sharp intellectual skills, and the skills of finding appropriate foods in the wild must have prepared people to succeed at agriculture. They had to be skilled botanists to find food plants and avoid poisoning themselves. — Bitter Crank
I'm not sure if I would 100% agree with this. Hunter-gatherer societies were characterized by sharp spikes of very intense and coordinated work, oftentimes revolving around seasonal animal migrations and the change of weather. They had to take advantage of the situation and they had to work as a team to succeed.
If you are relying exclusively upon agriculture to survive, then yeah I can see how that would require far more labor and cooperation than H/G. But H/Gs practiced limited agriculture too, and so do everyday modern people in their gardens. These modes of agriculture don't seem to require nearly as much effort of group coordination.
Surely only a really neurotic, unstable creature would give up what worked so well for something that they had to wait for, because of seasons and the nature of agriculture, over what was a “comparatively easier and healthy lifestyle”. Meaning that agriculture offered something better very quickly, which it can’t have. — Brett
Yeah, that's the real crazy question,
why did they?
Agriculture-based states existed only in very specific environmental conditions; conditions that minimized how much work was needed for agriculture to work, and conditions that offered no other obvious alternative. Ancient Mesopotamian city-states were dependent on the flooding of the Tigris and the Euphrates to do a lot of the hard work for them (but certainly not all of it); it would be unimaginable to see a city-state in a different environment, like the mountains.
But even still, ancient Mesopotamia was not a desert, and there were plenty of other alternatives to agriculture nearby to the rivers at the time (unlike how the region is today, which is an arid desert). Many people were able to live outside of and independent of the states, and many tried to escape as well. If agriculture-based societies were an obvious benefit to anyone, why were the majority of humans living outside of them for the majority of human history, and why were so many people trying to escape?
The industrial revolution could not have happened without all the benefits that came from agricultural societies. The fact that H/G societies never changed right into the 20th century is testament to that. — Brett
Perhaps H/Gs never changed because they never felt the need to
:smile:
Centralized agricultural states came and went frequently for the majority of human history. "Empires" looked impressively unified on paper, but were much more porous in reality. Industrial technology allowed humans to conquer the natural work into submission; fast and long-distance travel and communication allowed for unprecedented levels of control. Nowadays states are ubiquitous, but they certainly could not exist without this modern tech.