ribbonfarm | Venkat’s recent post The Disruption of Bronze
touched on a subject I’ve been pursuing fervently for the better part
of a decade now: the time frame in which psychologically modern humans
evolved. More than that, however, my interest is in why and how human
psychology shifted to cause the sudden, radical changes that ultimately
resulted in civilization.
My view is that without an understanding of this shift, there can be
no evolution beyond the devouring, predatory virus that is civilized
culture. In a mere 10,000 years, civilization has all but wrecked the
planet — a truly impressive horror.
Collapse (of either the slow or sudden variety, take your pick) is a
certainty, in my opinion; what I needed, for my own sanity, was a
context in which to fit this state of affairs. Does the story really
begin and end with American avarice? Are humans condemned to repeat the
rise-and-fall of civilizations until we wipe ourselves out for the last
time? Is there no greater narrative arc here?
Civilizations rise and fall not in isolation, but as complexes. They
follow the outbreak of certain memes, as evidenced by the archaeological
record, in clusters of time and geography. In the West we humans do
civilization not only because of what we think, but because we
think our thoughts in a specific kind of way. It makes sense then that
the narrative arc should begin with the emergence of our specific kind
of thinking.
Pre-Conquest Consciousness
Anthropologist E. Richard Sorenson is best known in academic circles
for pioneering what’s known as “visual anthropology”: the use of
non-dialectic observational techniques in the field of anthropology,
most often through the use of film. Academics are, however, notorious
for missing the forest for the trees; Sorenson’s real contribution came
as a result of his techniques.
Visual anthropology made it possible for Sorenson to identify
patterns of behavior inherent across isolated, unrelated, primitive
tribes. Underlying these behavioral patterns is a type of mindset which
Sorenson calls “pre-conquest consciousness,” which he describes thus:
Most of us know about subliminal awareness—the type of awareness lurking below actual consciousness that powerfully influences behavior. Freud brought it into the mainstream of Western thought through exhaustively detailed revelations of its effects on behavior. But few, including Freud, have spoken of liminal consciousness, which is therefore rarely recognized in modern scholarship as a separate type of awareness. Nonetheless, liminal awareness was the principal focus of mentality in the preconquest cultures contacted, whereas a supraliminal type that focuses logic on symbolic entities is the dominant form in postconquest societies.
. . .
From the Latin language underlying our Western heritage we can understand that liminal awareness, by definition, occurs on the threshold of consciousness. This concept, though abstract, provides a useful term. In the real life of these preconquest people, feeling and awareness are focused on at-the-moment, point-blank sensory experience—as if the nub of life lay within that complex flux of collective sentient immediacy. Into that flux individuals thrust their inner thoughts and aspirations for all to see, appreciate, and relate to. This unabashed open honesty is the foundation on which their highly honed integrative empathy and rapport become possible. When that openness gives way, empathy and rapport shrivel. Where deceit becomes a common practice, they disintegrate.
Where consciousness is focused within a flux of ongoing sentient awareness, experience cannot be clearly subdivided into separable components. With no clear elements to which logic can be applied, experience remains immune to syntax and formal logic within a kaleidoscopic sanctuary of non-discreteness. Nonetheless, preconquest life was reckoned sensibly—though seemingly intuitively.
Given the widespread nature of Sorenson’s findings, and the almost
complete absence of supraliminal symbology in any given culture’s
archaeological record prior to its own Neolithic Revolution, it would
appear that this liminal consciousness is the default psychology of
anatomically modern humans. “Pre-conquest” peoples do not have the
capacity for intellectual abstraction, not because they are less
intelligent — the homo sapiens sapiens brain has not changed
physically for something like 200,000 years — but because their mental
capabilities are focused entirely on the here and now. Gods and
goddesses, writing, numbers and the like cannot exist in the “complex
flux of collective sentient immediacy” because they have no physicality
with which to be either sentient or immediate. Such things exist
entirely in the abstract. They are, for all intents and purposes, not
real.
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