Monday, April 21, 2014

On Being Civilized

Generally speaking the first cultures who settled along river valleys did so after many generations of subsisting in a horticulture environment. Settled life gradually adopted intensive agriculture and developed a government, some say in order to enable people to do this. There is a loss of health which is apparent in a comparison between hunter-gathers and their counterparts living in cities. Historically speaking, there was always a large mass of non-settled peoples who chose not to live in this sort of arrangement: Germanic tribes to the north of Rome, Laplanders in Scandinavia, or peoples from the Central Asian Steppe. Recently, this has changed with the last hunter-gather non-settled peoples being pushed to the absolute margins.
Benefits to living in society depend on the specific nature of the society in question. But generally, they are easy access to food which you do not have to kill or grow yourself. On the other side of this coin there is a loss of agricultural and hunting knowledge which makes on dependent on the supply chain, and in the case of the modern West, Just in Time delivery. This could cause problems in a crisis, for example most Americans do not even have the relatively simple skills involved in growing a vegetable garden which got their grandfathers or great grandparents through the depression or that allowed people to supplement their diet during rationing imposed in the Second World War.

If the medieval age of faith was overthrown, it has been replaced in turn by a level of trust unknown in non-first world countries. The belief in the goodness of man has enabled some to gain absolute power over the use of force, and has led the rest to simply trust that this will be done in a just and even handed way. Justice here is meant as a sort of impartiality and respect for the rule of law which should be the guiding principle of any social contract.

The question of the sacrifice of freedoms is an old question. Thomas Hobbes viewed stateless society as that of a war of all against all. That is, every person was thought to be so self interested that he would simply do what he wanted unless held down by an authority so vast and terrorizing that he could do nothing but submit to it. Hunter-gatherers appear to have a vast amount of free time; the sort of back breaking labor that the peasant is subjected to in the first societies was unknown, as well as class distinctions. The Peasants after all only existed because there was enough food to allow them to be born and fed; the life of hunting and gathering is one that exists on the margin of starvation. Civilization gives humans the power over environment, and in a time-obsessed modern society in a post Ford/Taylor world it gives the illusion of power of the fifth dimension. Or at least, gives us the pressing sense that the time between waking and sleeping must be accounted for by socially acceptable behaviors such as work, school, approved hobbies or avocations.

No comments:

Post a Comment