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Home > Reflecting History > Episode 75: Against the Grain Part III-Mortality and Early States
Podcast: Reflecting History
Episode:

Episode 75: Against the Grain Part III-Mortality and Early States

Category: Society & Culture
Duration: 00:44:57
Publish Date: 2020-05-25 23:30:00
Description:

If the civilizational narrative of progress as a result of human use of agriculture is flawed, then why did states and civilizations develop? How do we define a state? Were the earliest states single entities that magically appeared when enough people congregated in one area, or is it again better to think of states as one method of organization on a carousel of early human organization and activity? We tend to think of states and governments as positive developments for the well being of humanity, but do we think early humans felt the same way? It's possible that the well being of early humans actually declined as the earliest states developed, due to early states contributing to mass mortality by way of disease, slavery, and war. 

This is part three in a four part series on James C. Scott's recent book "Against the Grain." The book provides a new and contrarian perspective on the origins of humanity, what the earliest states were really up to, and how the environment and "civilization" around us has fundamentally changed us as human beings.  

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