The primitive societies, such as bands and tribes, are in
states of constant war because they have no official governments to establish
peace. As societies grow, more organized classes emerge, such as religious
leaders, who incite sacrifices and holy wars, and political leaders, who
incite raids and proper armies. Eventually such lower societies connect into
proper nations, after they have warred enough with each other that they’d
rather all war together against somebody else’s nation, or several other
nations, on behalf of whatever is available.
A society is really only proper once it develops sea and air travel,
and can thus fight primarily one-sided wars against lesser societies, until
they are subjugated to the point of noble objectification and abuse. Then, you
see, then society flourishes, and you get intellectual endeavors like “world
wars,” or “world wide webs,” on which whole new societies develop and war by
taking each other’s sites down. They invent realms in which to war.
That’s the real difference between primitive
societies and developed ones: the primitives are always at only one war. A
developed society can lose many wars, all at the same time.
Guns, Germs and Steal is the most intelligent book I've ever read... I really should get his others but it was so damned thick that I admit my brain sort-of reels at the prospect.
ReplyDeleteAlso, "A developed society can lose many wars, all at the same time."- this is a lesson I learn every single time I play Civilization.
DeleteThis had kind of a "Deep Thoughts by Jack Handey" feel to it (from the old SNL segment.) Except that this had more truth embedded into it.
ReplyDelete