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The Sovereign Individual - Mastering the Transition to the Information Age - YouTube - PR Report #3 The Sovereign Individual::Chapter 3 - East Of Eden

发布时间:2021-10-21 13:33:10   原节目
这期PR报告深入探讨了《主权个人》的第三章,重点是农业革命及其对暴力复杂性的影响。演讲者“Pleb Rising”解释了由气候变化引发的这一历史性转变如何从根本上改变了人类社会,并为复杂政治和经济体系的发展奠定了基础。 农业革命是对结束末次冰期气候变化的回应,它标志着从游牧的狩猎采集生活方式向定居的农业社会的转变。 狩猎采集者的特点是“时间视野狭窄”,专注于眼前的需求,缺乏强烈的个人财产或结构化工作的概念。他们生活在小型、流动的群体中,适应环境并分享资源。 向农业的转变引入了更“广阔的时间视野”。 农业需要计划和远见,从而提高了对时间周期的认识,出现了日历,并发展了天文学。 农民更固定,重视土地和个人财产。 随着耕种作物和饲养牲畜的需求,“工作”的概念,正如我们今天所理解的那样,开始出现。 尽管这种转变是渐进的,但它代表了人类行为和社会组织的一次深刻转变。 演讲者强调了农业革命如何导致了“暴力的复杂化”。 一个关键的发展是专业化的出现,不仅在农业和畜牧业方面,而且在手工艺品方面,以及关键地,在暴力方面。 积累固定资产的能力,主要是土地和农产品,创造了保护和掠夺的动机。 这导致了“战士阶级”的兴起,他们获得了土地、收获份额和财产的奖励。 这是军阀的起源,并最终发展为国王,他们的权力取决于他们有效运用暴力的能力。 随着成功运用暴力的潜在回报大幅增加,暴力的逻辑发生了转变。 会计和记录的出现成为管理和保护积累资产的必要工具。 少数控制土地的人面临被没收的威胁,而许多小规模农民则容易受到攻击以及天气和作物歉收的影响。 这种脆弱性导致了“封闭村庄”的发展,作为一种防御策略。农民试图通过汇集资源和分担劳动来降低遭受掠夺性暴力和生产力低下的风险。 这样做是以减少参与开放市场和限制个人资本积累机会为代价的。 他们牺牲了一些经济潜力来换取更大的安全。 演讲者随后重点介绍了大约在公元 1000 年左右发生在欧洲的“封建革命”,以说明这些动态。 罗马帝国的崩溃最初使小土地所有者受益,因为税收减少了,土地所有权变得更容易获得。 然而,人口增长、气温下降以及骑兵战争的技术进步改变了力量平衡。 改进的马镫、马蹄铁、马鞍和马嚼子赋予了骑士在战斗中显著的优势,提高了他们运用暴力的回报。 这导致了广泛的抢劫和暴力,迫使自由持有者将他们的土地让给教会或富有的农民以寻求保护。 权力和土地的集中导致了贵族的形成和城堡的崛起。 为了应对骑士的去中心化暴力,中央集权的教会成为了秩序的力量。 它在恢复和平、通过大学进行教育、通过缮写室传递知识以及提高农业生产力方面发挥了积极作用。 教会在农业方面进行了创新,记录了最佳实践,重新配置土地以提高可耕性,并赞助了磨坊、道路和桥梁等公共工程项目。 此外,大教堂和修道院的建造通过创造对熟练劳动力和专门工艺品的需求,间接地培育了市场。 演讲者总结说,农业革命提供了一个最初的例子,说明了改变中的超级政治因素(气候)如何显著地改变了暴力的逻辑。 从狩猎采集社会到农业社会的转变为暴力创造了动机,并极大地增加了保护资产的挑战。 农业,有史以来第一次,使犯罪和治理都成为有价值的追求。 他认为这种历史性转变是理解互联网时代将如何继续改变当今暴力动机的重要基础。

This PR Report episode delves into Chapter 3 of "The Sovereign Individual," focusing on the agricultural revolution and its impact on the sophistication of violence. The speaker, "pleb rising," explains how this historical shift, triggered by climatic changes, fundamentally altered human society and laid the groundwork for the development of complex political and economic systems. The agricultural revolution, a response to a climatic shift that ended the last ice age, marked a transition from nomadic hunter-gatherer lifestyles to settled agricultural societies. Hunter-gatherers were characterized by an "attenuated horizon of time," focusing on immediate needs and lacking a strong concept of personal property or structured work. They lived in small, mobile groups, adapting to the environment and sharing resources. The shift to agriculture introduced a more "expanded horizon of time." Farming requires planning and foresight, leading to a greater awareness of time cycles, the emergence of calendars, and the development of astronomy. Farmers were more stationary, valuing land and personal property. The concept of "work," as we understand it today, emerged with the demands of tending crops and livestock. This transition, although gradual, represented a profound shift in human behavior and societal organization. The speaker emphasizes how the agricultural revolution led to the "sophistication of violence." A key development was the emergence of specialization, not only in farming and herding but also in crafts and, critically, in violence. The ability to accumulate stationary assets, primarily land and agricultural produce, created incentives for both protecting and plundering. This led to the rise of a "warrior class," rewarded with land, harvest portions, and property. This was the origin of warlords and, eventually, kings, whose power was predicated on their ability to wield violence effectively. The logic of violence shifted as the potential rewards for its successful application increased substantially. Accounting and record-keeping emerged as necessary tools for managing and protecting accumulated assets. The few who controlled land faced the threat of expropriation, while the many, smaller-scale farmers, were vulnerable to both attacks and the vagaries of weather and crop failures. This vulnerability led to the development of "closed villages" as a defensive strategy. Peasants sought to reduce their risks of predatory violence and low productivity by pooling resources and sharing labor. The trade-off was reduced participation in open markets and limited opportunities for individual capital accumulation. They sacrificed some economic potential for greater security. The speaker then focuses on the "feudal revolution" around the year 1000 in Europe, to illustrate these dynamics. The collapse of the Roman Empire had initially benefitted small landowners, as taxation decreased and land ownership became more accessible. However, population growth, colder temperatures, and technological advancements in cavalry warfare shifted the balance of power. Improved stirrups, horseshoes, saddles, and bits gave knights a significant advantage in combat, increasing their returns on violence. This led to widespread looting and violence, forcing freeholders to concede their land to the church or wealthy farmers for protection. The concentration of power and land resulted in the formation of a nobility and the rise of castles. In response to the decentralized violence of knights, the centralized church emerged as a force for order. It played an active role in restoring peace, educating through universities, transferring knowledge through scriptoriums, and improving farming productivity. The church innovated in agriculture, documented best practices, reconfigured land for improved farmability, and sponsored public works projects like mills, roads, and bridges. Furthermore, the construction of cathedrals and monasteries indirectly incubated markets by creating demand for skilled labor and specialized crafts. The speaker concludes that the agricultural revolution provides an initial example of a changing mega-political factor (climate) significantly altering the logic of violence. The shift from hunter-gatherer to agricultural societies created incentives for violence and dramatically increased the challenge of protecting assets. Farming, for the first time, made both crime and governance worthwhile pursuits. He views this historical shift as an essential foundation for understanding how the internet era will continue to change the incentives of violence in the present day.