A Winston Churchill bon mot: "He has all of the virtues
I dislike and none of the vices I admire." Not long ago I made some
conversational remarks about some multilateral negotiations in the news (I
don’t really wish to go into the details or politics of them here) by referencing
the Congress of Vienna; I recently had perused Kissinger’s dissertation in the
subject, so the event was on my mind. My virtuous interlocutor dismissed them
as “not culturally relevant.”
Let me suggest that there is
no such thing as history that is not culturally relevant. Some, admittedly, may
be more directly related to the subject at hand than others. For example, when
discussing the US Constitution, the Federalist Papers are more linearly
applicable than Aristotle’s Politics,
but the latter is still relevant, not least because the classically educated
founders took their definitions of political terms from Aristotle. Even if they
had never heard of the old Greek, however, what he had to say about constitutions
in general would be of interest. So would Confucius, if only as counterpoint. Nor
is cultural relevance a matter of one’s own recent genealogical heritage – I’ll
return to the word “recent” in a moment. None of my own direct ancestors (so
far as I know) was in the Americas at the time of the Revolution or the Early Republic,
for example, but Jefferson still matters to me, both for the influence his
views still have on American politics and for the way he and other
Enlightenment thinkers influenced the world.
Let’s return to that word
“recent.” Suppose you come face to face with an ancient Egyptian mummy or one
from the Tarim Basin in China. If either of those desiccated personages left an
intact line, it almost certainly includes you. In other words, that mummy is a
direct ancestor, regardless of where your family “originated.” A decade ago
science journalist Steve Olsen with the help of statisticians and computer
specialists calculated the interconnections of the human family tree. Due to the doubling of direct ancestors with each
generation, every person now living is descended from every person who was
alive in the world in 5000 BC who left an intact line. Even a tiny rate of gene infiltration over the
steppes, deserts, and seas ensures this - and migration was often anything but
tiny. True, people in various regions often bred
largely with themselves, and so developed local ethnic characteristics, but
never entirely with themselves. There was and is always some fraternization
with others and therefore some gene flow.
So, your direct ancestors and mine
surely herded cattle on the grasslands of East Africa and washed in the Chang Jiang River ;
they almost as surely hauled stones at Giza and fought one another beneath the walls of Troy . As for recent times, yes, there are
such things as Romanian history and Laotian history, just as two random
examples. It may be that you or I have no direct ancestors who came from the
Balkans or Southeast Asia within the past few
hundred years. One never can be entirely sure about such things, of course. The
travels and habits of merchants, sailors, soldiers, and prisoners of war always
introduce some uncertainty, but it is possible we personally have no recent
ancestor who hailed from either place. Yet, Romanians and Laotians are scarcely
more distant than our cousins even so. Accordingly, their national histories
are culturally relevant to us as well as to the residents of Bucharest
and Vientiane .
I
don’t intend some Pollyanna point about being “all brothers and sisters” who in
some imagined state of nature would live in peace. We are all family, true
enough, but families squabble and break into factions all the time, especially
over matters of inheritance; our consanguinity is not always much help in
keeping things genial. If anything, our fractious nature contributed to our
species’ early success.
If we
go further back in time, our predecessors are astonishingly few. Genetic studies
indicate that the entire population of fully modern humans 60,000 years ago, most
probably occupying a small area of East Africa, was no more than 5000 – fewer
people than reside today in the small suburban town where I presently live. Such
a small number of people had to be all closely related and very likely spoke a
mutually intelligible language. The subgroup of these folks that left Africa
around this time seems to have numbered only about 150 – the standard size of a
hunter-gatherer band. What prompted the 5000 to radiate across Africa and the
world? A good part of the reason apparently is that we never got along very
well with each other. Hunter-gatherer societies, despite lacking formal
governments and police, are pretty cohesive up to about 150 people, but after
that disputes become hard to resolve internally. When population rises, they
split into smaller kinship groups, which in turn grow to 150 and split again. They
trade, interbreed, and sometimes cooperate, but warfare also is commonplace
among them, even when resources are not scarce; unsurprisingly, new groups
sometimes simply choose to move away when that is an option. In 60,000 BC it was
a planet-sized option. These quarrelsome (and fertile) bands spread out to
occupy the world, all because they really didn’t like each other very much.
So,
our dual heritage is one of kinship and argumentativeness. Our destiny is not
predetermined by our past, fortunately, but it is surely influenced by it. One
way to help choose a new path, whether personally or politically, is to learn
from the mistakes and successes of very slightly more distant kinfolk. One
might even call those mistakes and successes relevant.
Hatred by The Kinks (1993) – an anthropological argument of
sorts
A very nice rebuttal to your "interlocutor". I agree with you and think that all history can teach us lessons. Sometimes it is what to do, and sometimes it is what not to do. But our tribal nature does make it hard to determine which is which. The fact that on the internet we all come together and then proceed to fight about electronic vs orchestral movie scores tells me we are far from dropping that tribal nature any time soon.
ReplyDeleteJohn Lovett's article in The Atlantic about internet ire is worth a read: http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/04/the-culture-of-shut-up/360239/ . I'm sure if there were another spare temperate continent, subgroups of us would march right over there -- maybe even splitting over matters of music. After all, there are far sillier reasons.
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