The impetus for agriculture comes from a lack of faith in the eternal abundance of nature. — Welkin Rogue
Arguably, you’re talking about The Fall. — Wayfarer
I think that that kind of anxiety about the possibility of failure, the realization that everything won't necessarily be all right but could go horribly horribly wrong if we're not careful, is at the root of all philosophizing, in the broad sense of the quest for wisdom, where wisdom is the ability to discern true from false, good from bad, etc. And furthermore, that the realization of the need for such wisdom is the loss of "innocence" in the religious sense of the word. — Pfhorrest
So to react to your original post, early agricultural states were not based on an anxiety about the future and risk-aversion. Complete dependence on agriculture increased the risk of starvation. There was no good reason for anyone working the fields to be doing that, apart from coercion by the state. — darthbarracuda
Complete dependence on agriculture increased the risk of starvation. There was no good reason for anyone working the fields to be doing that, apart from coercion by the state. — darthbarracuda
Which takes me to the Fall. Other creatures in similar circumstances presumably would have moved on from the area and/or endured forced population reductions. Humans, with an extended range of foresight and ingenuity, decided to fight nature, but thereby increased their burdens, their anxiety, their suffering. — Welkin Rogue
Right, this exactly. Humans are adapted to an environment that doesn't exist anymore: the savanna of eastern Africa as it was during the Pleistocene for hundreds of thousands of years. Around 12,000 years ago that environment disappeared, and by all normal rights humans would have disappeared with it, except that we had the unique cognitive ability to figure out how to adapt our memes -- in the Dawkins sense of units of learned behavior -- instead of just adapting our genes. And now we are masters of pretty much every environment on the planet, most of which were are terribly adapted for on a genetic level, but we make up for it on the memetic level. That memetic adaptation being: think about all the ways that things could go wrong, and act to minimize them, even if everything is fine right now. — Pfhorrest
↪darthbarracuda I think it's more that an agricultural lifestyle enabled state coercion than that state coercion created the agricultural lifestyle. If you didn't need agriculture, if you could just walk away from an abusive society and live comfortably in the wilderness with no loss to yourself, the state would be powerless over you. The state has to have something you need, and that's control of the capital you require to make a living. A true post-scarcity world would dissolve the impetus for capital and state alike, and likewise, a pre-scarcity world (like the Pleistocene environment we're adapted to) would have no impetus for them either. It's only when times get hard and people have to band together and figure out how to make the most out of scarce resources or else die that the strong men who can horde those resources to themselves unless you do what they say have any power. — Pfhorrest
Regarding (2), this is most likely the result of enslavement. Once you have an agricultural society, it becomes rational (?) for those with power to capture, enslave and coerce those weaker than them to do the work at the 'bottom' of the division of labour (which did not exist much before, except along gender lines). This is because there is simply a lot more work to be done (simple hunter-gatherer societies could get by on around 15 hours a week), and now there is surplus to be collected.
This suggests a further question, however. Why is it rational for those at the top to coerce those at the bottom? I think it is because this aforementioned surplus is something people now wish to acquire in greater and greater amounts. So it seems like the possibility of acquiring surplus triggered something like human greed... as though greed were a latent psychological inclination among humans that was waiting for the right conditions. I would suggest that such greed is closely related to risk aversion and anxiety. The background conditions of scarcity which compound such anxiety are then also the background conditions of greed - the perception of scarcity, whether or not it remains real, might then lie behind persisting greed and the coercion it inspires. — Welkin Rogue
I don’t think complete dependence on agriculture increased the risk of starvation. I would say the opposite, otherwise it wouldn’t have thrived. Mismanagement might contribute to starvation. — Brett
I think it's more that an agricultural lifestyle enabled state coercion than that state coercion created the agricultural lifestyle. If you didn't need agriculture, if you could just walk away from an abusive society and live comfortably in the wilderness with no loss to yourself, the state would be powerless over you. — Pfhorrest
Contrary to your point about walking away, though, the historical evidence we have actually shows that people running away from early states was a serious problem for these states. Malnourishment, epidemics, heavy taxes, slavery, wars, back-breaking and onerous labor, inequality, hierarchies, all of this stuff is what you find in states. People had no good reason to stay and so they frequently took flight. The prestige of a state was reflected not so much in how much land it had but in how big their population was. Cities built walls not just to keep enemies out, but to keep the residents in.
And if you are raised in a state, you are basically domesticated and so you don't really know how else to live outside of the conditions of the state. If all you know is farming, then even if there are plenty of other resources available from different methods, you are out of luck. — darthbarracuda
So to react to your original post, early agricultural states were not based on an anxiety about the future and risk-aversion. Complete dependence on agriculture increased the risk of starvation. There was no good reason for anyone working the fields to be doing that, apart from coercion by the state. — darthbarracuda
Against The Current (book) suggests that agriculture was the invention of the earliest nascent state which saw in agriculture a way of extracting wealth from peons. — Bitter Crank
Completely depending on a single method for obtaining sustenance is extremely risky because it is putting all your eggs in one basket. — darthbarracuda
Against The Current — Bitter Crank
But it worked. Unless you disagree with what we have as a consequence. — Brett
But it must have been a good deal for the majority to begin with at least, right? Otherwise the whole thing wouldn't have gotten off the ground.
So perhaps the story is something like: scarcity causes cooperative agriculturalisation (motivated by well-grounded anxiety about survival without it). But at some point, given the low and declining feasibility of exit, and the division of labour, dominance hierarchies take hold. This is self-reinforcing: political-material inequality locks in because the growing surplus is unevenly allocated according to the hierarchy, and this enables further coercion, which further increases inequality, etc.
Does that sound right? — Welkin Rogue
The interesting question to me is how and why states developed, given all of these disadvantages. I think at least part of the answer is to see the agricultural society as a population machine, which aims at producing domesticated humans; humans that cannot survive on their own and depend on the state to survive and so therefore maintain it. — darthbarracuda
Against The Current — Bitter Crank
Against the Grain — darthbarracuda
Lure people into grain growing. Where did the state get the idea of agriculture from? — Brett
We know now that hunter-gathering, swiddening, pastoralism and the like are comparatively easier and healthier lifestyles. — darthbarracuda
The impetus for agriculture comes from a lack of faith in the eternal abundance of nature. — Welkin Rogue
We know now that hunter-gathering, swiddening, pastoralism and the like are comparatively easier and healthier lifestyles. — darthbarracuda
In particular, it must have been that it was the more risk-averse among us who were willing to pay those up-front costs; to start growing crops and increase reliance on such crops. — Welkin Rogue
But it worked. Unless you disagree with what we have as a consequence.
— Brett
Well, it worked eventually, but only once industrial technology was invented, which facilitated fast and reliable long-distance travel and communication. Before the Industrial Revolution, and especially in the early days, states were rising and falling all the time. — darthbarracuda
Would that cabal be called "the aristocracy"? I think that is a bit too conspirational. Farming and cities emerging because of their utility (and necessity) is likely more closer to the truth. Yet notice that hunting has been something that the ruling class has enjoyed privileges over others. The natural framework is to both farm and hunt, yet hunting can only support a limited population.That might be the case. I wasn't there, but it seems quite possible that some sort of early cabal roped a bunch of dopes into farming. — Bitter Crank
Would that cabal be called "the aristocracy"? I think that is a bit too conspirational. Farming and cities emerging because of their utility (and necessity) is likely more closer to the truth. — ssu
Or simply there wasn't enough wildlife to hunt. Hunter gatherers simply have to be few, while agriculture can support far larger populations. And of course the domestication of sheep, pigs and cattle happened only some couple thousand years later than agriculture (8 000 BC or so). Once you start "farming" animals, not so much need for wild game.. It seems likely that people gradually drifted into settled agriculture because there were some advantages to that kind of lifestyle, compared to exclusive hunting and gathering. — Bitter Crank
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
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
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
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
But H/Gs practiced limited agriculture too, and so do everyday modern people in their gardens — darthbarracuda
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