Dwarkesh Podcast - Why Rome actually fell: plagues, slavery, & ice age — Kyle Harper

Episode Date: April 24, 2025

800 years before the Black Death, the very same bacteria ravaged Rome, killing 60%+ of the population in many areas.Also, back-to-back volcanic eruptions caused a mini Ice Age, leaving Rome devastated... by famine and disease.I chatted with historian Kyle Harper about this and much else:* Rome as a massive slave society* Why humans are more disease-prone than other animals* How agriculture made us physically smaller (Caesar at 5'5" was considered tall)Watch on Youtube; listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.----------SPONSORS* WorkOS makes it easy to become enterprise-ready. They have APIs for all the most common enterprise requirements—things like authentication, permissions, and encryption—so you can quickly plug them in and get back to building your core product. If you want to make your product enterprise-ready, join companies like Cursor, Perplexity and OpenAI, and head to workos.com.* Scale’s Data Foundry gives major AI labs access to high-quality data to fuel post-training, including advanced reasoning capabilities. If you’re an AI researcher or engineer, learn how Scale’s Data Foundry and research lab, SEAL, can help you go beyond the current frontier of capabilities at scale.com/dwarkeshTo sponsor a future episode, visit dwarkesh.com/advertise.----------KYLE'S BOOKS* The Fate of Rome: Climate, Disease, and the End of an Empire* Plagues upon the Earth: Disease and the Course of Human History* Slavery in the Late Roman World, AD 275-425----------TIMESTAMPS(00:00:00) - Plague's impact on Rome's collapse(00:06:24) - Rome's little Ice Age(00:11:51) - Why did progress stall in Rome's Golden Age?(00:23:55) - Slavery in Rome(00:36:22) - Was agriculture a mistake?(00:47:42) - Disease's impact on cognitive function(00:59:46) - Plague in India and Central Asia(01:05:16) - The next pandemic(01:16:48) - How Kyle uses LLMs(01:18:51) - De-extinction of lost species Get full access to Dwarkesh Podcast at www.dwarkesh.com/subscribe

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Today I have the pleasure of chatting with Kyle Harper, who is a professor and provost emeritus at the University of Oklahoma. And the author of some really interesting books, The Fate of Rome, Plagues Upon the Earth, Slavery in the Late Roman World, an upcoming one called The Last Animal. The reason I wanted to have you on is because I don't think I've encountered that many other authors who can connect. biology, economics, history, climate, into explaining some of the big things that have happened through human history in the way you can. The most recent reason I wanted to have you on is I interviewed David Reich, the geneticist of ancient DNA. And some of the questions we were discussing, he kept emphasizing this overwhelming role and surprising role that diseases have had in human history, not just in the recent past, but I mean, in his work going back like thousands of years,
Starting point is 00:00:51 tens of thousands of years. And he's like, you've got to have Kyle on. I email him afterwards. Like, who should I interview next? And he's like, you got to have Kyle on. You have this graph in the fate of Rome. Yeah, you show human population over the last few thousand years. I assume that these two down spikes are both the bubonic plague,
Starting point is 00:01:09 your Sydney, a pestis, right? And so this is not like some small little nudge you can see. Like the overwhelming, I mean, other than the hyper exponential growth in human population, the overwhelming, not just one, but the overwhelming two major features in human population, going back the last 10,000 years, is this one bacteria, right? One of the things you discuss in the book is that the collapse of the Roman Empire was a result of this one particular event. Well, I mean, the period that I normally work on is sort of from the high Roman Empire, so like the glory days of the Pax Romana in the first or second century,
Starting point is 00:01:44 which is usually where I start, through what we call the late-end, or early medieval period, so the sixth or seventh century. And at the beginning of this period, Rome dominates this Mediterranean Empire. It's what you think of when you think of ancient Rome. It's the largest city in the world. It's the center of this huge network. And then by the end of this period, the city of Rome has, you know, we don't know, 50 to 100,000 people.
Starting point is 00:02:11 It's a 10th or 20th of its former size. And I think we now can say pretty clearly that environmental factors like climate, but also especially diseases play a part in that really big transformation. And while there's a problem because we don't have the same kind of modern government mortality statistics that we do for like COVID or even for the last century or century and a half, you know, we have to piece together from clues, but it's pretty clear that the bubonic plague events, whether you're talking about the black death of the 14th century, the plague of Justinian in the sixth century.
Starting point is 00:02:46 These events are capable of causing death rates temporarily that are just orders of magnitude beyond what we're accustomed to. And even in these ancient societies, the reason why these were so shocking in a world where the death rate's always pretty high, probably, you know, several percent of the Roman population, three, four percent a year may be dying in a normal year. And so for them to just be utterly shocked. by the death rate, already tells you that it's some multiple of what they're accustomed to. I think you're discussing the book the possibility that the death rate might have been close to
Starting point is 00:03:24 or even over 60% wherever the black death. So this is not just like, this is like literally the most significant thing. Yeah, it's mind-blowing. And I mean, I, you know, in the case of the black death in the 14th century, it's pretty clear. It kills 50, 60% of the population in entire regions. And we don't necessarily think that it killed 50, 60 percent of the whole continent, although that's actually not impossible. But even the fact that it's killing 50 percent of the people in cities, in provinces, in countries, is just beyond the damage that other plagues do. Right.
Starting point is 00:04:01 And do you think that we're not for this 60 percent mortality event plus for the fact that I think we haven't even discussed yet, this super severe cold snap? Do you think that the Roman Empire might have otherwise just kept going? Because you discussed, like, there were these two previous other big pandemics. The empire still survives. I think Will Durant had this quote that the Roman Empire fell for longer than most empires have lasted. So do you think, like, you know, be similar to China, maybe there were, maybe a dynasty collapses, but fundamentally the same sort of cohesive nation reemerges? Yeah, I mean, that's a great comparison. and not just sort of like decline and fall of dynasties, but also like geographic changes in the configuration that parts get added and parts get cleaved off, but you still kind of think of it as fundamental continuity in the core.
Starting point is 00:05:00 Like that to me is a very, very plausible counterfactual. Like Justinian, the emperor in the 540s, he reigns from the 520s to the 560s. He's on a path of success. He's retaken Africa. He's mostly retaken Italy when the plague hits. Like, to me, a very plausible counterfactual is that a more or less Mediterranean core of the Roman Empire could have survived east and west. So it does sort of survive in the east.
Starting point is 00:05:31 But even including really all of Italy, Africa, and probably Spain, that would have been, like, to me, a very, very reasonable. outcome of the sixth century if you hadn't had this kind of random shock, that there would be this, you know, the Roman Empire would keep going. And remember, it does. And it calls itself the Roman Empire until the 15th century. But we would think of it as maybe more sort of like really the Roman Empire if it still included the Western Mediterranean and was this major powerful urbanized polity that resists invasion from the from the southeast as happens in the seventh century. So yes, the answer is like, I did. think that the Roman Empire absolutely could have had another turn, sort of as the thing that we kind of mean when we say the Roman Empire, this pan-Mediterranean powerful urbanized empire. Yeah. Okay. So one of the things I found really interesting was you were discussing the firsthand accounts as this big, and by the feel free to explain the cold snap as well as it's happening. But the first hand accounts of people who are experiencing this, some of whom come from this burgeoning Christian. faith, which already lends itself to millinarianism and apocalyptic. I'm curious, basically,
Starting point is 00:06:49 how did different people try to make sense of, like, this once in a thousand-year event that's super kind of like just intense? Clearly, people have to try and explain within the elements of a worldview that they have how something like this can happen. And they don't have, they don't have modern science, they don't have germ theory, you know, they don't think of it. in terms of a biological event or a climatic event. And since that's come up and you've invited, I'll say a little bit about that. But this is one of the other really exciting frontiers where we're learning new things about the human past that we just didn't know 10 or 15 years ago. That in this case, we now have really cool paleo-climate data that helps us understand that this period of the 6th and 7th century.
Starting point is 00:07:42 was also a period of really abrupt and significant natural climate change. And so we're all familiar with like anthropogenic climate change, that carbon emissions, stay in the atmosphere, trap heat, humans are changing the climate. It's a big problem. Let me talk about it if you want. I just like to clarify that like that view is not incompatible with the reality that the climate does also change for natural reasons on every time scale, from like really long geological timescales to much shorter timescale.
Starting point is 00:08:13 So we live in the Holocene the last 11,700 years. They've been pretty stable, pretty warm. It's an interglacial. We're literally between ice ages right now. And it's been really stable in the big picture. And yet even within that stability, there are smaller scale climate variations and climate changes. And because we need to understand how the Earth system is. works, how the climate system works, in order to be able to model what's happening,
Starting point is 00:08:42 we need an empirical record of what the climate has done. So for historians, this is like great news because now we have a huge number of sometimes even pretty high resolution climate reconstructions for historical periods across the Holocene. And so we now know, like we did not know this 20 years ago when I started graduate school, day, that the Roman period experience, some really abrupt episodes of climate change. And in this case, the sixth century, we know the cause that there was a series of really significant volcanic eruptions. Volcano is a very powerful, short-term climate forcing mechanism. They ejects sulfur into the stratosphere, it aerosolizes and sort of creates a reflective
Starting point is 00:09:31 shields that scatters the radiation, entering the atmosphere. And so it leads usually to short-term cooling. And in this case, you had a series of really significant volcanic eruptions that cooled the climate for several decades. And in some ways, with the later series eruptions, even like a century and a half. And it wasn't just a little bit cooler. It was like a degree to two degrees cooler, which we all kind of know now like two degrees. This isn't weather. This is climate.
Starting point is 00:10:01 So like two degrees doesn't affect your day. but 2 degrees globally is a pretty different globe. And so all of a sudden, in the late Roman world, it's much, much cooler, probably areas that have been wetter or now drier, places that are drier, maybe wetter. I mean, it changes the hydrological cycle as well, which is more complicated. But in addition to the shock of the plague, you have this simultaneous and probably not unrelated shock to the climate system. And so we know that it was essentially challenging for agricultural agriculturists that when the sun is blocked and it's really, really cold and the wheat doesn't grow, your society then starves. And so the Romans get this like wham-bam double shock of climate change, famine, and plague. And so back to how people explain this.
Starting point is 00:10:59 Yes, like apocalyptic thought is one of the principal sort of ways people frame it. To them, nature is going crazy. You know, huge amounts of the population are dying of this horrible sudden disease and the crops don't grow. And you don't have microbiology and you don't have climatology. So you explain it with the resources of the worldview you have. And there's a huge burst of like apocalyptic thought in the sixth and seventh century, which is always kind of, of there. I mean, you mentioned that Christianity's eschatological. It is, yes, fundamentally, but like that comes out in different ways with different sort of emphasis in different time periods.
Starting point is 00:11:42 And this is a period the 6th century when there's a really sharp emphasis on eschatology in Christian thought. I found your early chapters in the book about what the Roman economy was like in this happy period. quite interesting. So there's a bunch of questions I have about this. If you read Gibbon and writing in the 1770s, I think he says in the 1770s that the happiest, if you want to look at the happiest time in human history, you go back to this period you're talking about.
Starting point is 00:12:14 So this is true, at least according to him, as of like a couple centuries ago, this is still like peak civilization. And you discuss the complexity of the Roman economy, the fact that millions of tons of wheat and other products have to make their way to Rome and the trade networks and everything. And then I think you basically say, like, look, they were experiencing productivity gains, the wages were increasing, population was increasing. But they were still not at the level at which it was plausible that, say, for these climactic and biological factors, they might have had an industrial revolution. And so I'm curious why you think, like, basically, yeah, paint a picture for me of what, like, the Roman world look like as of this happy period.
Starting point is 00:12:55 and why that was still like counterfactually not, you know, couldn't have just saved us a thousand years of history if they were on the right track. Yeah. I mean, first of all, like, I think this is like the sort of question that historians ought to worry about all the time. Like, we're going to be thinking about why didn't the Roman economy catalyze the takeoff? Because in some ways, it was so precocious for its time period. And it seems not utterly impossible, right?
Starting point is 00:13:23 the Roman world is still a pre-industrial economy. So agriculture is the dominant sector. The majority of people work in agricultural pursuits. And productivity is low. They don't have modern mechanized traction. They don't have modern synthetic fertilizers. They don't have the modern, you know, green revolution yields, all the things that have made agriculture stupendously productive.
Starting point is 00:13:46 So just like the primary sector is fairly limited in terms of its productivity because of the sort of limitations on technical inputs. And, you know, we can think of the inputs to an economy. You're going to be capital, labor, and ideas. And what the Romans, they've got people. They have some investment, but like they just, they don't have technology. They don't have ideas. It's a late Iron Age civilization.
Starting point is 00:14:13 And I do think there's productivity growth. And that productivity growth comes from markets, from trade, where you get, you know, comparative advantage in Egypt. I'm really good at growing wheat. You can make glass in Syria and then we'll trade. And the urbanization of the Roman world certainly facilitates that. Cities are these sort of like hubs of productivity and exchange. And there's some technology.
Starting point is 00:14:41 I mean, the Romans, you know, if you look really, really hard over like five or six centuries, there's certainly like economies of scale where the production process and manufacturing is sort of moved from artisanal to sort of, you know, industrial scale. But there's not really, there's no takeoff because they don't have science. They don't have research and engineering that drives continuous productivity gain. So I think they go like precociously far in a pre-industrial setting where you take trade really far. They have good institutions in terms of, you know, there's strong property rights, there's relative relatively reliable contract enforcement.
Starting point is 00:15:24 There's financial markets. They have like the most advanced financial markets in the world before like the 17th or 18th century. There's impersonal financial intermediation. So like it's not like you have to know me and come ask me for a loan if you want to go, you know, build a ship and go trade something. There are banks that take money from depositors and, you know, keep balances and then lend out to debtors.
Starting point is 00:15:51 who want to go and do entrepreneurial things. So they have, like, so much potential, but there's just no, there's no spark. You never see these sustained productivity increases. And I would just say ultimately, it's because the Romans don't have technology improvements that are really self-sustaining. And the reason they don't have that is because they don't have science. Their science sucks. I'm offending some of my colleagues, I'm sure.
Starting point is 00:16:15 Like, Galen is great. Ptolemy is incredible. You know, I love plenty of the elders encyclopedia. But like, if you look in the big picture, the contribution that the Roman Empire makes to our knowledge of how nature works and then the applied technology that comes out of that is really pathetic for five, six hundred years. And so they go as far as you can with Smithian advantages to market exchange and specialization, to banks and finance, but without the kind of creative destruction of new technologies that improve productivity. productivity, you're eventually going to run out of improvements. If you're like Augustus or some other Roman emperor and you're like, look, we've got this big an economy, but I want to see productivity gains. And you want to make it happen somehow.
Starting point is 00:17:05 What is it exactly? Is there something you, like from a top-down perspective you could have done? I mean, in Britain, you know, the government subsidizes the royal arts and so forth. That's what I was going to say. Yeah, the longitude prize and so forth. Yeah. That's exactly what I was going to say is, I mean, this happens first in France and then Britain, but you get royal societies for science where you're doing really, I would say there's like three things that are essential there. One is like the promotion of what we would call basic or fundamental science.
Starting point is 00:17:37 So it doesn't all have to be like immediately practical or commercialized that you're like promoting deep knowledge of nature. Two, you're doing it in an empiricist way, and this is something very important in the 17th century that the Romans, by contrast, don't have as you have like this spirit of Francis Bacon that we need to ground our knowledge in experiment and observation, not just believe whatever authorities or Aristotle said. And it's very much the spirit of places like the Royal Society is we don't take things on anybody's word, especially like Aristotle's. And so you need basic science, you need empiricism, like this rigorous and self-correcting. And then third, you need a sense of useful knowledge. And that's the other thing that really comes together in the 17th century is not just the basic and abstract science, but the application. And the 17th century language for that is useful knowledge. And that is something that doesn't ever get wired together in the Roman Empire.
Starting point is 00:18:39 There are tinkers and engineers. but they're not talking to the mathematicians and the physicists. And so if you were from on high to design self-sustaining innovation, I think you would want to bring those elements into proximity. And I guess this, you know, unfortunately for them, didn't do it. Probably good for the world. The Romans are pretty nasty people in a lot of ways. I definitely am of the opinion that sort of the high science matters,
Starting point is 00:19:10 that like Isaac Newton is not a tinkerer, right? He's not building like pumps. But the guys who are like his friends. And they're in and around the Royal Society. And they're absolutely. I mean, look at Denis Pepin, who's a French engineer, who's like very much in the circle of like Leibniz and the like very high abstract mathematics
Starting point is 00:19:31 is trying to build like vacuum pumps. And the proximity of like high math, high science, very abstract with what is ultimately going to be the sectors that lead to mechanization where then you can harness this new source of energy or this not new source of energy, this sort of source of energy that is there all along but hasn't been tapped and coal. That's what catalyzes the big positive, cyclo-positive feedbacks. So what the Romans don't have is that. What the Romans do have is the kind of specialization.
Starting point is 00:20:08 And like now that we look for it, it's there. Like when you look at, you know, food processing, which is a huge sector, the way that they build mills, like there's definitely improvements. But there's never like the catalytic change where you get runaway positive feedbacks. That's right. Yeah. So a previous guest of mine, Nat Friedman, I don't know if you saw this, but he launched this challenge called the Vesuvius Challenge. Oh, yeah. This library of Herucillaneum in 79 AD was buried in.
Starting point is 00:20:38 under the ashes of Mountain the Suvius when the volcano erupted, speaking of volcanoes. And now they figured out with modern techniques how to read the burnt scrolls. And it is supposedly the biggest library of classical text ever. Like it was like double the amount of classical texts we have. What, as a scholar of ancient Rome, what would you personally find most fascinating? Where are you excited to find from this data? Well, I mean, I'm super interested in the history of math. Like, it'd be sort of like what happens after Euclid?
Starting point is 00:21:17 Because it's very hard to say, but you get like these really interesting people pop up, like Diophantes, who's later in the early Roman Empire. But, like, there's still, like, really interesting math going on. And, I mean, Euclid is incredible. Like, that is the Greek, like, experiment in math and science. is the one that I think had like the better chance of sparking sustained takeoff. And it didn't. And it'd be interesting to know more about like why.
Starting point is 00:21:47 Why did things stall? Because these people aren't, you know, like, like Euglet is not just like a towering genius who comes out of nowhere. He's very much a product of the culture and the questions that are being asked in the generations before. But it just sort of feels like, you know, after him, you fail. to get that kind of sustained, continuous progress in advance. So maybe sort of back to that big question that we were asking before. Like, what is it that prevents the kind of breakthroughs that we see in the modern world? What is the population of Greece during their golden age?
Starting point is 00:22:25 Well, I mean, of like the greater Greek world or like individual city states like Athens. I mean, we think of Athens as being like a couple hundred thousand people, like not massive. So I wonder if it's like the Greeks had a science but not the people to sustain a modern economy, or not a modern, but even as sort of like industrial economy. And then the Romans had the people but not the science. Yeah. Yeah. There's probably something to that that like there's just not the critical mass of educated people,
Starting point is 00:22:57 of like sheer cognitive power to like keep it going. Yeah. In the last couple of episodes, I've mentioned how my sponsor WorkOS helps. companies like OpenAI, perplexity, and cursor, get enterprise ready so they can grow faster and scale further. Of course, WorkOS can't actually help you build
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Starting point is 00:24:00 I did not realize before I read that one how central I mean how much room was a slave society I guess that just like isn't a salient thing when it in a sort of like conventional understanding of Rome yeah but why didn't you paint us a picture of the how much slavery was involved in the room involved?
Starting point is 00:24:18 I mean slavery slavery you know tragically is like a really important institution throughout history we sometimes tend to think of it as like a distinctly modern phenomenon but that actually misses the deeper picture. And in fact, it obscures the importance of modern slavery,
Starting point is 00:24:35 because modern slavery is uniquely important and it's uniquely tied up with certain kinds of market exchange and certain kinds of production, certain kinds of racial ideologies. There's like things about modern slavery that's really important to understand those are different, but not just because slavery is there. Like slavery has this longer history. And slavery is more important in some societies than others. And we want to try and understand that to ask why and then what implications does that have for understanding those societies?
Starting point is 00:25:06 Rome is one of those societies. Slavery is really a prominent institution in Rome from the late Republic. As the Romans conquer other parts of the Mediterranean, they start taking captives as slaves en masse. And they build an economy that really relies on slave labor in important sectors of the economy. So plantations where commodities like wine, olive oil, are produced for market exchange that allow landowners to amass enormous amounts of wealth. So slavery becomes this really important institution that's entangled in the development of the Roman economy from maybe the third or second century BCE. And then with ups and downs and really important changes along the way for centuries and centuries. As you're pointing towards like from the supply side, all the Roman conquests lead to all the surplus labor that they can make use of.
Starting point is 00:25:59 And on the demand side, these cash crops. Yeah, exactly. I'm very big proponent of the idea that you have to have both, right? You have to have a source of slaves. And after the conquest stops, the Romans figure out other sources of slaves. And if anything, the demand is equally or perhaps even more important. Because if there's not a mechanism, if there's not institutions that let you turn this kind of exploitation into cash flow, the institution's not going to go very far. And so it really is the institutions, the presence of markets where you can take labor and turn it into profit.
Starting point is 00:26:39 That's the most important element. One of the things I find interesting is in the age of colonization, we're used to thinking about slavery in terms of. of race, but also like maybe like religion and other things which more obviously demarcate free and slave populations. In the Roman world, it doesn't seem that that's clearly the case. Yet there's no abolition movement the way that like emerges out of, you know, England and like a 19th century or something or maybe even before that. So and the reason that's mysterious is like, look, if you're like literally descended from slaves,
Starting point is 00:27:14 if you're like, my grandfather was a slave, but then we were freed. and they're like basically just like you. You would think that there would be more of a sense of like, not everybody would be an abolitionist, but at least some people would be like writing about abolition and something. And you got like Christianity and so forth, burgeoning, and they didn't seem to have a problem with it. Like, why is there no abolition movement
Starting point is 00:27:35 despite this sort of like heterogeneous nature of the safe population? Yeah. It's sort of like disturbing in a way, isn't it, that humans have, have the ability to convince themselves that it's okay to own other human beings as property through a variety of different kinds of ideological justifications. And you see even in the ancient world, there's different models that people use to say that slavery is okay.
Starting point is 00:28:04 I mean, Aristotle develops a theory of natural slavery that actually some people deserve to be slaves by the very nature and that it's actually good for them to be in bondage. What's really interesting, though, is that doesn't actually ever seem to be like the dominant ideology. The Roman ideology of slavery is not racialized. It's not like the Romans think that the Greeks or the Germans are like, you know, some fundamentally separate kind of human that justifies their exploitation. The Roman ideology of slavery is really rooted in the law of property and status. So they think that slaves are people who've been conquered. And rather than killed, they've been spared and they've been sold into the condition of being somebody
Starting point is 00:28:48 else's property. And this seems to mentally explain to them where their slave system comes from and why it's justifiable. And so you have different kinds of criticism of the slave system from within. But remember, most of what we have written is from the slave ownership class. It's not like, you know, I don't think the slaves with themselves, you know, believe in. this ideology, and there must have been sort of what we would think of as abolitionist movements or spirit that we just don't have really good records of.
Starting point is 00:29:23 But it is like this curious thing that the Romans are able to build this huge system that's really brutal and really violent, but has this kind of flimsy ideology where they tell themselves these stories. But the deeper, the deeper lesson of that is that humans can create these systems of belief that will exclude others and justify almost any form of exploitation and commits themselves that it's okay. I hope your next book about The Last Animal discusses the potential parallels with factor. Well, there's some, there's a pretty gruesome chapter, I'll say that. I don't know if you mentioned what numbers you say, but like I think it was like 10 to 20% of the population under the Roman Empire was enslaved,
Starting point is 00:30:10 or whatever the number is there. But given that larger size of a slave population, it's surprising to me that there's so few slave revolts. It's not only in Rome, but even throughout history. Like there's Sparta in 71 BC. Then is there a Haitian revolution? I forget when, but like probably late 18. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:30 Yeah, if like 20% of the population is enslaved, yeah. Like how is this a sustainable? you know, if you're like running a farm and there's like 4,000 slaves and then like the next farm over also and like, why aren't there more slave rebellions? Yeah, right? Why not? I mean, why how did they do this? I mean, they have a really elaborate system of repression. They're worried about it. And probably the parts of Roman society where there are 20, 30, 40 percent slaves are pretty, pretty limited to certain regions. certain time periods. And partly because once you cross some kind of threshold, the challenges of repressing sort of direct violent resistance.
Starting point is 00:31:17 But it's, you know, it's a system of exploitation. That means there's always a mix of carrots and sticks, to put it crudely, like the Romans extract people's labor partly through, you know, physical violence, but also partly through like systems of manumission that try and incent people to obey and not to rebel in order to earn their freedom. And, you know, they're using everything from literal chains to like enticements to try and keep rebellion from ever sort of coalescing in a way that can turn into collective violence. But yeah, I mean, it's a little bit, it's a little bit challenging for us to look back
Starting point is 00:32:00 and say, I mean, we know, like in Pompeii, the slave population. in Pompeii's huge, it must be 30%. And not all of these people would have been like plantation, you know, workers who were lashed every day and, you know, worked to the physical bone. A lot of them are nurses and textile, you know, workers and maids and tutors and all sorts of things that are sort of quasi-embedded in households as well. Where there's always this weird psychological dimension, too. I mean, part of the strangeness of slavery is how it's deeply embedded in domestic institutions as well. And so there's ideologies in which the Potter Familius is sort of the father and the master that sort of brainwashes, tries to brainwish people against resistance. But it's just like the important thing to recognize is just like a pervasive system that tries to colonize people's minds and pervasively tries to keep them from resists.
Starting point is 00:32:59 resisting. Yeah. And I wonder if we can close the loop with the question we began with, which is, why didn't Rome have an industrial revolution? I don't know if it's a plausible explanation that cheap slave labor reduced the incentives for mechanization and engineering and other crafts, or if not, I don't know. It's definitely an argument that's been made. Aldo Sceivoni, who's an Italian historian, has argued that. It's kind of a, it was like a neo-Marxist tradition that argues this. It's an interesting argument.
Starting point is 00:33:29 I don't buy it at all. But, you know, the good version of that argument would just be that the Roman Empire is using, in fact, slaves. And many of the most forward elements of the economy, too, we tend to, I think because we think we know slavery is bad and we think progress and economic growth and innovation is good. We tend to think that those things don't go together. But in reality, it's like the most economically advanced sectors of the Roman economy that have the most serious, you know, a high degree of organization, productivity that tends to employ slaves. And so in the Roman world, like you could make the argument that if the labor in those sectors had been free, there would have been more opportunities for positive feedback loops. The way the argument is usually made is just that, you know, the Romans got rich without really thinking about productivity. They just wanted to extract labor, extract wealth rather than create wealth, you know, which I don't think is like a terrible argument.
Starting point is 00:34:35 But I just ultimately, I don't think it's the system of labor that keeps the Roman world from industrializing. And there are lots of sectors in the Roman world where slavery is not a dominant institution. And it's not like they're more productive or like flirting with some kind of breakaway. So it's an interesting argument, but not one I've ever found all that persuasive. Final question about Roman slavery. What did Gladiator get right and wrong about? Will they just abduct you in front of your house? You know, I haven't seen the second one.
Starting point is 00:35:04 So you mean the first one, yeah. The first one got right that when you're making a movie, you should worry more about making a good movie than historical actually. The first one's a great movie. and if it was like completely historically accurate, it would have been much more boring. So I'm not going to be critical of that movie. Like it plays very loose with the facts of high politics around comidus and the creation of this character.
Starting point is 00:35:32 But who cares? I mean, Russell Crow is incredible. But on slavery in particular. On slavery in particular. I mean, I think actually that's one of the strong suits of the movie as you see this like, this like completely, you know, exploitative system that brings people from very different parts of the world who have very different backgrounds. And then the system of like urban spectacle is very real.
Starting point is 00:36:00 And the use of slave labor in that is certainly a part of it. So the movie actually gets like some really important things about that right. And that makes it totally forgivable that it has to create a. a kind of high politics storyline. Yeah. Okay, I think that covers all the questions about Rome. We can get back to your most recent book about human history and plagues. What do you make of the general, like, argument that people have often made that we were living in a sort of Eden before agriculture,
Starting point is 00:36:31 especially given your, you know, you've explained that all these diseases that were sort of stuck with are, like, actually quite new. If we take that perspective seriously, was life before human population exploded and we had agriculture just much more pleasant, at least in comparison? Homeless abians is 2 to 300,000 years old. We emerge in Africa and disperse, multiply. But we spend 90, 95 percent of our history as foragers. So people who are hunter-gatherers who take energy from wild food sources rather than sedentary farmers who have. domesticated plants and animals and live a sedentary lifestyle where you're enslaved to this wheat or rice, but it gives you reliable calories.
Starting point is 00:37:22 That is, along with the Industrial Revolution, and then whatever this thing we're about to go through, that is the biggest change in the history of our species, other than those others. Okay, so the shift from foraging to farming. It affected everything. It affected our beliefs. It affected our genetics. We're all basically genetically different, adapted to live in a different kind of environment with different kinds of diets. It affected our societies, affected inequality, it affected culture in every possible way.
Starting point is 00:38:00 And of course, it affected our health in really basic ways. It affected our labor regime. So doing the same kind of labor over and over every day is very different from running around, as a hunter chasing deer or whatever, which sounds quite nice. It had changed, so it changed our labor regimes. It changed our diet, most of all. Foragers tend to eat high protein, high fat-ish diets with no refined carbohydrates, but like limited carbs. And it's a very varied, highly varied diet.
Starting point is 00:38:37 So sedentary farmers tend to eat more monotonous diets. And they tend to be, like, dependent on grains and starches. So, like, very narrow spectrum for your calories. So changes in labor regime, changes in the diet. And then changes in lifestyle, being sedentary and living in big populations, that then puts you in proximity to other humans, puts you in proximity to human waste. So feces are a major, major conduit of infection.
Starting point is 00:39:15 And it puts you into proximity to the air that they breathe, which is conducive to respiratory diseases. So this transition, which, by the way, takes thousands of years, right? It's one of these things that's more of a process than an event. But it has massive implications for human health, including the infectious disease environment that we inhabit. So it's not like hunter-gatherers were living in paradise. Like the infectious diseases that they had were seriously burdensome. They sucked, and probably most people died of infectious disease.
Starting point is 00:39:48 They, you know, malaria is a really, really old disease. Lots of diseases existed in the Pleistocene in like our Paleolithic past. So it's not like it was Eden. But there is this idea that the transition from foraging to farming, I mean, Jared Diamond called it humanity's biggest mistake. And certainly these changes entailed some things that were not positive net for humanity. And one of them is that it definitely increased the infectious disease burden. So simply as our population multiplies and as we're in contact with feces, and as we're sharing the air through which respiratory
Starting point is 00:40:38 pathogens can spread. Diseases are constantly trying to take advantage of this. That's just how nature works. Energy is scarce. Everybody's trying to steal it from everybody else, including microbial parasites. And so the disease burden of humans over time definitely increases. And the burden of infectious disease on humans goes up over time. So very broadly across these thousands and thousands of years, the diseases that are
Starting point is 00:41:08 suffered by, say, people by the time of the Roman Empire are absolutely much worse than what had been, you know, the case in Stone Age times. James Scott has an interesting theory in Against the Grain. Yeah. I don't know if it originates with him, but he argues that one of the reasons that the early agriculturalists were so successful. And David Reich, by the way, if you've seen this stuff about like the Amnia 4500 years ago, conquer all of Eurasia, but before them, the.
Starting point is 00:41:38 The Anatolian, the initial hunters, farmers, like, they're the ones who, like, displays the initial hunter-gatherers across Europe and Asia. Anyway, so he argues that initial wave was so successful because of these first, I guess, diseases that the farmers were, had created the conditions to engender. And basically, the relationship we had, sorry, the relationship these farmers had with respect to the foragers that they were taking over. from were similar to the relationship the Europeans had to be Native Americans, where inadvertently, the disease is just like a significant player and why you were able to dominate them. I don't know how plausible you find that.
Starting point is 00:42:21 I mean, I would first thing say, like, it's important. I think you were starting to get at this, that there's never like a generation of humans that has the opportunity to make this choice once and for all. Like should we stay like hunting, you know, mammoths or should we become sedentary farmers with like basically torturous dentistry and die by diarrhea? Like this happens over thousands of years through an evolutionary process where nobody can is a story of unintended consequences, right? I mean, the mammoth are gone because partly because we killed them all. And so people start like the first livestock that are domesticated are goats. And nobody says like, hey, let's become goat farmers.
Starting point is 00:43:03 The goats are wild. They're ibexes and people are hungry. And so they start managing them to only kill the males to make sure that they can reproduce. And they start pinning them and they start killing the wolves who are trying to attack them. And over very, very, very long periods of time, this becomes this tight mutualistic relationship where all of a sudden we're goat farmers, you know. But no generation makes that whole decision for anybody. So that's part of it, is that it's unintended consequence. that are made in very, very incremental steps. And then two is, like, I definitely agree that there's some kind of, like, cultural selection here where the farming groups are simply so much more adapted to extract energy efficiently from the environment. Right? It's all about energy. You want to multiply. You want to grow.
Starting point is 00:43:57 You want to survive. It's all about energy. And so the, you know, foragers. requires huge landscapes to extract enough energy to feed themselves and grow and reproduce. Whereas farmers per unit of land can extract such higher rates of energy that then can be, you know, through photosynthesis is captured and turned into edible sugars that we can metabolize. And so those populations are just growing faster that they, you know, quote unquote, out-compete the hunter-gatherer population, say, of Europe that are largely but not completely
Starting point is 00:44:36 displaced. Now, on top of that, so just like the energy story alone is a big piece of it, but then on top of that, you probably do have some kind of population difference in the exposure and possibly even immunity to infectious diseases. So I definitely think that early farmers, the first farming societies, that are starting to live sedentary lifestyles where you have aggregations. These are not cities. These are villages.
Starting point is 00:45:06 But still, that's more than like a hunter-gatherer band. And your childhood is then going to be constant exposure to a series of pathogens. Those kinds of populations, when they're then migrating into Europe or probably carrying these pathogens with them that may have had a kind of further effect that on top of just being able to extract more energy and multiply faster, drives up the mortality of the existing populations. The point you made about fertility is interesting. I can't remember where I saw this, and it might be wrong, but I basically remember reading that for it's not just the fact that you're not, like, the energy density is lower.
Starting point is 00:45:46 It's like you're also moving around a lot. Right. And so that because of that you're spacing out kids much more so than if you're just like in the same place. And I think like the actual fertility for foragers is like not. is sort of like a reasonable, I don't know if sustainable is the right word because I don't mean like in ecological sense, but more so in like a like it keeps your population constant level. Don't make me swear, but it's like more like four than six. Right. Because women who are moving with a foraging band, you know, miles and miles on foot on average a day and also carrying kids.
Starting point is 00:46:24 Right. Right. Are going to have very different life history than sedentary populations. Yeah. And that's very clear. Publicly available data is running out. So major AI labs like meta, Google DeepMind, and OpenAI all partner with Scale to push the boundaries of what's possible. Through Skills Data Foundry, major labs get access to high-quality data to fuel post-training, including advanced reasoning capabilities.
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Starting point is 00:47:27 If you're an AI researcher or engineer, and you want to learn more about how Scales data foundry and research lab can help you go beyond the current frontier of capabilities, go to scale.com slash thwar cash. One thing I'm really curious about is what effect these diseases through history have had on the cognitive functioning of people. I mean, yeah, you discussed this in like the chapter about like more recent history of the great divergence and probably like contributed the productivity of
Starting point is 00:47:58 Europe that they were able to have public health earlier. But literally, if you go back thousands of years, you mentioned, for example, that like Caesar was 5-5 and that was considered tall during his period. The same diseases and malnutrition, whatever it was, that caused these physical health effects also mean that like the average IQ was much lower just because of like, Like, you know, you're like when you're a kid, you're sick, and that steals away nutrition from brain growth or something. Yeah. Short answer, yes.
Starting point is 00:48:30 Long answer. We know that in the modern world, like, say over the last 250 years, first in Western European societies and their settler offshoots and then more globally and more rapidly globally, there have been really deep physiological changes in the average human, right? So we're talking about populations with distributions. And what's happened is really two things. One is there's more energy per capita. So people eat more. They eat more calories and they eat better calories. They eat lots of bad stuff too.
Starting point is 00:49:05 But like people eat more. And two, the burden of infectious disease has been lowered. And growth, the growth for a human, is a very complicated trait that's influenced by genetics. So, you know, I was never destined to be, you know, super tall. But it's also affected by environment, which includes, but it's not limited to what you put in, nutrition. And then what you spend, either doing labor or what you spend fighting infectious disease. Infectious disease imposes a huge burden on the body. The immune system is extremely metabolically expensive.
Starting point is 00:49:45 And so if your childhood is spent just fighting infectious diseases, you're not. you're going to struggle to invest energy and growth. Yeah. So there's a massive increase in the size of populations over the last 250 years. And even though it's an even more complicated trait, this improves people's cognitive abilities. Right. People are smarter. Like, may not feel like it.
Starting point is 00:50:14 But I think it has rapidly leveled off. But, you know, people are more intelligent today than they were 100 years ago. Their brains are better nourished and their body spend less time fighting pathogens. So I think there's no doubt that pre-industrial populations, and again, populations, so you still have, you know, you still have your Isaac Newton's who whatever infected him as a kid, didn't slow him down. Right. But at the population level, I think there's no doubt that not only were pre-industrial populations
Starting point is 00:50:48 shorter. This is just a total fact that we know from their bones. But they probably also, on average, had sort of a lower distribution of cognitive abilities. But with a big distribution. Yes, you have this
Starting point is 00:51:02 a great profile in the book about like living in London the 18th century and just like how disgusting it was. Pretty disgusting. But at the same, like literally at the same time in that city you were just mentioning there's these scientists and people with like towering intellects
Starting point is 00:51:19 were basically figuring out how the universe works and how to make all these machines and so forth. And so, I mean, one answer is just like what you just said, like, look, the distribution was lower, but that's still like maybe Newton would have had an IQ with standard deviation higher if he was born today. But just like seeing that from the small population,
Starting point is 00:51:39 you're seeing so much genius. Yeah, I guess the question is, how is that still how could you have had this much of a deleterious impact on cognitive functioning and still had enough spare geniuses to kick off the Industrial Revolution? Yeah, I mean, obviously it didn't keep them from discovering some pretty amazing things. So it couldn't have been, it couldn't have been, you know, completely destructive. But, you know, that's one of the thing that's interesting about the early modern period
Starting point is 00:52:10 in the 17th, 18th century in particular is it's sort of this between period where where you have sort of the pre-industrial and the modern that are still, like, mixed together in these really interesting ways. And so, you know, the example I use in the book is the very famous diary of Samuel Pepys, who's this incredible figure. And he is, like, very close to Newton in that social group. And, you know, his name is on the first edition of the Principia, right? I mean, these people are, like, this close to each other. But, like, you know, the stuff that I evoke, I won't, I won't, you know, this is a family podcast. I don't want to say.
Starting point is 00:52:49 But, like, you know, the stuff that Peeps does bodily functions is like mind blowing to us. It's vile and disgusting. But at the same time, like, you know, right down the way, you've got people who are making the most fundamental discoveries about the nature of the universe and inventing machines that will improve productivity. and ultimately economic output. So that's what's precisely so weird and interesting about that particular period is you have this kind of mingling of the old and the new. Yeah, when I had Joseph Henrikon, one of the things he discusses is if you look at, I mean, culture revolution has figured out some remarkable things, right?
Starting point is 00:53:29 If you look at the cuisines of different cultures, apparently the spices they use mash the antimicrobial and antifungal properties you need in that particular biome. At the same time, you're like watching, I mean, reading that part of the book, I'm like, okay, I get in some cases they just genuinely did not have the resources to invest in public health and so forth. But like, come on. I mean, like, I don't know if I should mention some of these things as well, but like, you're just like sleeping in your own vomit and so forth. Like, why didn't cultural revolution or some like foresight just be like, hey, like, this we can sort of like do without? Yeah, I mean, it's a deep question.
Starting point is 00:54:09 And what I think we don't think enough about is like how, like how in a really fundamental way, how hard are some problems to solve? Like some problems are just like very, very hard to solve. And even though the incentive is really there, you think, ah, that took a really, really long time to figure out. Even though if you'd only known, like it would have made your life so much, so much better. And like, you know, and it also, like, there's tons of trial and error, right? So the example that comes to my mind is the invention of vaccination. Yeah. Which is like one of the great human achievements, like of all the public health improvements is the most important one.
Starting point is 00:54:57 Public health is never perfect. It's this like system of like six or seven really critical tools that involve clean water. personal hygiene, vaccines, antibiotics, different kinds of therapeutic interventions or rehabilitation therapy. And we're still, we can't like fend off all the germs. Like you have to have all of that and you can sort of like achieve this equilibrium state where you mostly have it under control. Vaccination is like the most important one.
Starting point is 00:55:30 And it took forever to find the first vaccine. And it took this huge. period of like all kinds of weird trial and error, like inoculation with the actual smallpox, which is very, very dangerous, not vaccination. Vaccination uses cowpox, the lymph of an infected cow to intentionally cause the immune reaction of humans. Before that, people would inoculate a person with actual smallpox, which is just giving somebody smallpox.
Starting point is 00:56:00 You do it through the skin. But like you're giving somebody smallpox. But it was absolutely in like a utilitarian way. It was the rational thing to do. It had these horrific death rates, right? We would never get FDA approval. But in a world where like 10, 20 percent of kids dive smallpox, it's this horrible decision, but you'd be rational to do it.
Starting point is 00:56:21 And so that we actually don't know where that comes from. It may come from Africa, may come from China. It spreads for like a century or more before Jenner discovers vaccination. So like it's clearly like really hard to figure that out. Right. And then even after Jenner, it's like another. you know, 60 years, 70 years before Pasteur kind of systematizes it and says, hey, we could do this for everything. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:44 Right. So some of these discoveries and innovations take, they're really, really hard to discover. But then the beauty of cultural evolution is that we can store that information. And you and I don't have to figure out any of that. We can go on to the next problem. Yeah. Because that's now been like collectively stored in the library of cultural evolution. It's known, you know, we don't even think about it most of the time until it's controversial.
Starting point is 00:57:12 But like what a blessing to, you know, to live after people like Jenner and Pasteur who figure that out. Yeah. There's this great blog post by the author Slym Old Time all the way to discussing. Wait, author what? You don't know internet culture, you know? There's a much weirdos out there. in a different world. Sorry. What'd you call him? Slime multi-mo. You can't just drop that. I'm going to let that one slide. Okay. I got some homework.
Starting point is 00:57:45 Anyways, he has a block, they have a blog post about scurvy and why it took so long to discover. And he was discussing all the sort of like, it's sort of like an epistemic conundrum because you can like use lime and you realize like, oh, it works. but then if you use lemons, which have much less vitamin C, or maybe it's the other way around, they just don't work much way worse, and then there's certain kinds of fruit which have vitamin C, certain crimes which don't. So it's like it's actually hard to kind of figure out like what is it if you don't have a mechanistic explanation about how you solve this problem. And I think they had once figured it out and then they lost the knowledge until it's
Starting point is 00:58:23 rediscovered again. Yeah. But it makes it all the more mysterious that the kinds of things that Henrik discusses, forage our societies having figured out. Like, literally there's like this 10-step process for how to process a certain kind of beans so that you don't get cyanide poisoning. And if you mess up any one of those 10 steps,
Starting point is 00:58:43 you're going to get cyanide poisoning. But, like, a society just figures out, you know, the bright taboos and traditions to process means. But, like, you can figure that out. But this thing, which is causing 20% mortality, you only get, like, in the 17th, 18th century. Yeah, yeah, but it's, we need to think more about about like the computation that's happening.
Starting point is 00:59:04 Like what you said it takes like 10 steps to figure out, you know, how to process this one particular kind of food. But but I'm guessing like it is just really hard to figure out infectious disease. It's a really, really steep mountain. And once you get like up to a certain plateau, then the discoveries like come really, really fast. They become systematic. and they become more fundamental.
Starting point is 00:59:30 But it was really hard to get there. Not that many societies really scaled it, not even within the societies that did. It was just a handful of people at first. But they did get there. Yeah. Okay. And then asking about where different countries were at around this time,
Starting point is 00:59:49 what evidence do we have about what was actually happening in India before the British or the Mughals? because it does seem to be the sort of black box in terms of historiography, but like, do we know if there were these huge plagues? Yeah, it's such a, it's a tricky problem because, okay, start with the third played pandemic in the late 19th century. Yeah. We know that that's in India. Yeah. And India is a big part of its history.
Starting point is 01:00:19 It's, in fact, where the plague basilis is discovered by Alexander Yerson. It's called Yersinia Pestis. In his honor, Japanese scientist finds it exactly the same time, gets left out of the nomenclature. But the special kind of honor to the deadliest Asian did hear in history. The worst pathogen ever. Immortality. The plague is definitely in India in the 17th century. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:46 And we know that from contemporary written records that are pretty and ambiguous about the presence of the disease. What we don't know is, was it there before that? And if not, why not? Because it kind of actually seems like it's not, at least not in this same explosive way. And that's pretty curious. Like we don't have a great explanation of that because, you know, India's connected to the Central Asian world where the plague is endemic. There's plenty of trade. It would have plenty of chance to move to the subcontinent.
Starting point is 01:01:24 So we don't understand that. And then if you go back even further, you know, that's the Black Death, you go back even further to the late antique period. It's like a total mystery. And the Indian sources from even the fifth and the sixth century are not great. They're hard to use. This is totally outside my language abilities. They require totally different expertise. I've worked with some people who think that they're like oblique reference.
Starting point is 01:01:54 that may be interpreted as epidemic. But one of the interesting things is we actually think that the plague moves through India to get to Rome. This is not definite. But the plagues in enzoatic, it's like natural animal reservoir, is the Tianchun Mountains where China, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan meet. And we can actually, in the scheme of things, kind of identify a pretty small region where the pandemic lineage comes from. And we know that it doesn't go overland. So it's not like the Black Death, which goes across the steppe, the Mongol trade networks, military networks carry it. In the sixth century, probably the plague goes south through India.
Starting point is 01:02:45 and maybe like the ports in Gujarat or along the West Coast that are still pretty connected with the Roman world, with East Africa, with Arabia, with the Red Sea, that the plague travels on ship across the Indian Ocean. Because it shows up, the plague of Jacinian shows up in the Red Sea. And so that is a clue that it probably is imported on this seaborne commerce. But how it got from Central Asia to Gujarat is a hard question. Huh. And I mean, I know the way we found that the Yersinia pestis existed in these Yamnaya 4,500 years ago, is by, then they just find, like, I don't know how. But like, if you can figure that out, why can't you look at the fossils of people 500 years ago or 1,500 years ago and just see if they have Yersinia pest. There's two things. First of all, you have to look.
Starting point is 01:03:45 Yeah. So there is at present not nearly the same amount of ancient DNA laboratory work that's happening on remains from ancient India. So if you're not looking, you're definitely not going to find it. And people aren't looking. Secondly, it takes a lot of luck for it to preserve. So the DNA molecule starts degrading the second you die. It just starts falling apart. And even in the best of cases where we're getting it from, usually you're getting it from, if it's pathogen, usually getting it from the dental cavity.
Starting point is 01:04:27 It's human DNA. You're getting it from the inside of the skull. But it takes a lot of luck for it to preserve because the soil conditions will affect the degradation. The temperature will affect the degradation. And just in a crude sense, heat is bad. And so it's why there's more DNA, ancient DNA that's preserved at more northern latitudes so far. But it has as much to do with the fact that people aren't looking. But we should be looking.
Starting point is 01:04:58 And if you've got skeletal materials from an ancient mass grave in India, call me, we can definitely look. And just to be clear for the context. Ancient. Ancient. Going forward to the future a little bit, speaking of future technology, maybe the one that's more relevant than AI, a synthetic biology.
Starting point is 01:05:24 And there's a worry that you can potentially create diseases, which maybe the evolutionary gradient is one that is not catastrophic, where diseases are incentivized to be transmissible but keep you at a chronic level of infection that doesn't necessarily kill you immediately. Actually, it's interesting why the bubonic plague diverges from that selection pressure, which would be you can answer. But, yeah, what do you think about the potential that with synthetic biology people can make diseases that have the transmissibility of measles, but also the deadliness of something like Ebola? Is that given your understanding of biology and whatever, is that?
Starting point is 01:06:05 How plausible is that? Well, let me start with the plague where I'm a little more comfortable as like consistent. something as a knowledgeable person. But I think is relevant because you said, like, it's weird that the plague seems to sort of evade some of these evolutionary constraints. And it's where it's just like saying what these are. Like a pathogen, you know, is a disease-causing organism, a microbe, usually a virus or a bacterium, but also fungi and single-celled organisms like protozoans that cause disease
Starting point is 01:06:39 and a host. But, like, they're not trying to cause you disease. COVID doesn't hate you, you know, plague doesn't hate you. It's just evolution. It's just trying to steal energy or hijack yourselves to reproduce its genes. And in fact, it has incentives to try and do that as well as possible while doing the least possible damage. And so it's always kind of trying to thread that needle or to find the right balance. Because if a pathogen just kills you instantly, there's nothing.
Starting point is 01:07:11 to steal and it can't transmit its genes into the next generation. And so it's a really, every pathogen has these like basic evolutionary problems. How do I get from one host to the next? And how do I evade my host's immunity, which our immune systems are incredible, for long enough to multiply? And so most pathogens, you know, this is clunky. There's not like a perfect equilibrium, but they have to like explore this space where there are these various constraints.
Starting point is 01:07:43 And they find all sorts of weird ways around it. And evolution is really, really good and really, really creative, unfortunately, for us. And just like the tricks that they find to, like, hide inside your immune system or to, like, fake it out are really, really wild. But one of the – I think there's two reasons why plague is so weird. and like we don't completely understand why plague is so weird, but I think there's two basic reasons. One is that it's vector-borne, which means that it's transmitted through another organism that is the intermediate. And arthropod or insect vectors are really annoyingly, you know, helpful to certain pathogens.
Starting point is 01:08:35 and most, there's actually a relatively small number of diseases that are transmitted through a vector like this. But they tend to be really, really nasty, like malaria, typhus, and they can kind of get away with it. Because even if, like, you're dying, you know, a mosquito can come and bite you and transmit malaria to me. Plague is a vector-borne disease. And it's very, very well adapted to transmit, particularly. particularly by fleas, but we think also maybe by lice and other biting organisms, but really by fleas, it's really, really good at transmitting by fleas. And that's evolution.
Starting point is 01:09:16 Actually, this is one of the cool things with ancient DNA we've been able to piece together at the absolute molecular level. The genetic changes that let it make this protein that have this effect in fleas. It's really weird. It forms this biofilm in the gut of the flea that chokes it and makes the flea feel like it It's starving. And so the flea just starts feeding and feeding and feeding. And meanwhile, it's regurgitating bacteria.
Starting point is 01:09:42 So can I ask a question about that? Why is it the case? Because there's diseases that hijack the fleas mind or ants minds or something. Are there like, why isn't there a disease that makes humans zombies? Is it just the human brain is like so complicated that it's like. Let me come back to this. We can talk about zombies, but that's a we need to, we need to wind up for that. Okay, so one, flee, so the plague is vector-borne, and it's really, really good at, like, manipulating the fleas, and it's just evolution.
Starting point is 01:10:12 Two, I said this before, but it's an animal disease. We're, like, collateral damage. We're totally irrelevant to the, to the, like, really core evolutionary history. The plague just wants to infect rodents. Of course, I'm anthrop-you know, it's not really, like, wanting to this. The plague makes a living. It survives. out there in burrowing rodent colonies,
Starting point is 01:10:39 we're like tertiary. I mean, it doesn't care at all. And so it has no evolved incentive to modulate its virulence to be able to transmit sustainably. Plague never sustains itself in human populations. Yeah. It can transiently infect human populations,
Starting point is 01:10:55 but then it always dies out. It becomes extinct, that lineage. And then what happens? What is the reason that, like, you have this one these 1,000 year cycles basically where
Starting point is 01:11:07 you know why is it not 500 years why is it not 10 years why is it like what causes us to go dormant what causes us to reemerge yeah this is you need to ask me in five years
Starting point is 01:11:17 because we've learned so much and now this is like the thing that we fall in the category of like almost a new question now that we can ask because now that we have the Neolithic
Starting point is 01:11:29 lineages and the bronze age lineages, we're starting to piece together this fuller history, but we still don't even totally understand the boundaries of when is the plague really sort of not circulating in human populations. And what are the factors that cause it to be so explosive? Like, is it evolution of the bacterium? Is there something about the genetics of the lineages that escape from the animal reservoirs that are, like, especially transmissible?
Starting point is 01:11:58 Is it human ecology, like that we put rodents, like black rats, you know, in the right place to get the disease? Is that there's something about the climate stress that renders the public? We don't have a great understanding of like why the plague comes and goes. So that's scary. And the connecting it to your other question about like these super bugs. I mean, what's interesting in the very big picture about the, the point. plague to me is like, even like the history of infectious disease is like on the one hand, like there's a real core of it that's just like basic principles of ecology and evolution.
Starting point is 01:12:40 Right. I mean, we do certain things in the environment that creates the conditions that pathogens can evolve and take advantage of. But on top of that, like evolution is just creative and weird and contingent and unpredictable. And it's those little, those little like contingent. contingent facts that can end up having these really, really huge effects. And so in the case of the plague, like, you would never, if you were like really, really knowledgeable about the basics of ecology and evolution of disease, you would never be like, I think that,
Starting point is 01:13:15 you know, every now and then a rodent disease from Central Asia is going to wipe out half of the continent. Like that shouldn't, that's not predictable. Right. That shouldn't be happening. And actually, that one's kind of an outlier. But infectious disease is always kind of like that. I mean, tuberculosis has probably killed more people maybe than any other infectious disease.
Starting point is 01:13:34 It's like this horrible disease. And it's just this, we don't really understand it. Now we really don't understand where it came from because it doesn't look like it as an animal host before it has humans. And it's just a weird disease. It's just a bacterial pathogen that in the huge world of bacteria, this one is very, very good at hiding. And so it gets in your chest. and it just lurks. And then it'll just waste you away,
Starting point is 01:14:03 particularly if you're poor and you're stressed. And so, like, there's some core principles there, but then it's just like something weird about it. It's just like this terrible luck that makes it what it is. And so to me, like, there's going to be another pandemic, you know, maybe bird flu, maybe something else. But, like, it's the real. real outliers and the weird ones that we should we should maybe worry about a little bit more than
Starting point is 01:14:33 we do. Like if you want to go to zombies, like I'll go there. You don't have to twist my arm too hard. But like, you know, like prion diseases or like fungal diseases where we don't have the same, nearly the same infrastructure and level of knowledge, biomedical research as we do for like bacterial and viral diseases, you know, something, if we create the incentive, evolution is going to find some weird ways to exploit it. And it's not just transmissibility and virulence. Those are like two really
Starting point is 01:15:04 basic parameters. But you know, when you look at even COVID-19, part of what made it insidious is it just has just the right parameters to be latent for just long enough. Like the first COVID, SARS-CoV-1,
Starting point is 01:15:21 2003, slightly more virulent. And in fact, it was just more enough that it made you sick pretty quick. And just that little difference was enough to contain it because you could figure out who was sick. COVID-19 was impossible to contain because it took, you know, several days before you really presented with clinical illness. And it's just that little quirk that made it totally impossible to control through non-pharmaceutical interventions early on. Right.
Starting point is 01:15:51 And so like, you know, follow that train of thought. If pathogens are going to find ways to take advantage, and there may be, you know, pathogens that push the limits on latency that can be very, very hard to control. So I think that's like one of the takeaways of the big evolutionary history of our pathogens. Evolution is very weird, very contingent, very creative at exploiting whatever weakness we give it. It's because there are billions and billions and billions of microbes in this room. You know, I don't know how many tens to hundreds of species of microbes are in this room. Most of them are not even remotely pre-evolved to pre-adapted to be pathogenic. But like lots are and they're constantly, you know, they're constantly seeing if you manage to lock that door.
Starting point is 01:16:41 Right. And they're just looking for a way to break in. Yeah, yeah. Okay, just a couple more rapid fire questions for you. have you found tools like deep research useful for especially your kind of work where you just have to compile insights for many different fields
Starting point is 01:16:56 if you throw in a question the kinds of questions you'll honestly investigate and now maybe they can rely on you as a citation for those particular questions about what effect did climate have on the fate of Rome or something but if you just had a different question which maybe you'd write a book about in the future how well do they do at synthesizing
Starting point is 01:17:11 this kind of literature and coming up with the thesis the way you do? Yeah, I mean amazing but not yet not yet completely displacing or like totally threatening the kind of work
Starting point is 01:17:26 that a historian does but at this point like I can't I can't even conceive of what a research project would look like without using AI I mean it's just a constant it's like become so central to your work
Starting point is 01:17:41 yeah but like for you know for just like a constant conversation partner. When you're doing research, when you're writing, you know, you can go back to that PDF and ask like, you know, whatever, how many species are there in this Texan? Or you can just ask the AI. And you still have to check it, but it's getting, obviously, it's getting more and more reliable really, really quickly. But I think it hasn't yet, like, you know, in some of the deeper research. It's not the equal of humans yet.
Starting point is 01:18:15 And then in the synthesis, it's really not. There's still that creative element of synthesis that's where conceiving of the question is as important as the answer. And it doesn't feel like it's like right around the corner. Have you used deep research? Oh, yeah. I started using it like two weeks ago or something. I don't know how long it's been around.
Starting point is 01:18:38 How long has it been around? Somebody told me about it. It's not that much longer. Okay. Somebody told me about it, like, I think it was like less than two weeks ago. And, yeah, it's incredible. I mean, it's really incredible. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:49 And then I want to touch on your next book that isn't out yet, the last animal. One question I have is, basically, how worried should we be about extinction, given that we're on the cusp of technologies, which will make it possible for us to reanimate many lost species? I assume if you have their genome or something, you know, our descendants will be able to, like, make more woolly mammoths and saber. to tigers and so forth. So, yeah, should we, like, discount the value of endangered species as a result? I would say no. We should still be concerned with the extinction for a couple reasons. One is, I mean, absolutely, this is a legitimate, serious scientific field to, like, understand the genomics of extinct animals.
Starting point is 01:19:35 And there is, like, you know, small but serious enough science of deep. the extinction. Yeah. And it's feasible that some organisms can be targeted for serious de-extinction efforts. At the same time, like a couple of thoughts. One is, like, I'm not that optimistic that it will work, not because I think it's necessarily impossible, although it's not yet, totally feasible, particularly for animals that don't have, like, very similar modern descendants. But it's because a species isn't just a genome. A species is an organism that inhabits a food web and an ecosystem.
Starting point is 01:20:18 And, you know, we can bring the woolly mammoth back, but there's nowhere for them to live. You know, the mammoth step where they need that they need to thrive is not there. And, you know, there's really very little point in bringing an animal back from extinction just to put it in a, a box at a zoo to sort of like, you know, satiate our curiosity about it. So without the ecosystem, you can't have the species. And really, one of the themes that I try and get at in the book that I'm trying to finish is, like, we need to think about living systems, ecosystems. And the extinction question is very much a question of, like, what kinds of systems will
Starting point is 01:21:03 exist on the planet? And I think, you know, whatever happens technologically in 100 years, 1,000 years, the impacts of humans have in biodiversity is going to be very, very long lasting. We're part of a species that has been impacting biodiversity for over 10,000 years. And there's things we can't do, there's things we can't undo. There's things we can't change about the past. But we're making decisions right now that we'll be binding on the future, whether our descendants like it or not.
Starting point is 01:21:34 And so we need to think very hard about like what choices do we want to make to keep intact the kind of variety and vibrancy of living systems that in a thousand years, 10,000 years, that will be a huge part of our legacy. Like the impact that we make on the stream of macroevolution will be one of the really big things that our species does. And it can sometimes be very hard to recognize that in like our individual lives, but collective. It will absolutely be part of our forever legacy on Earth. And so we need to think very carefully about the choices that we make. I think that's an excellent note to close on. Just to plug one more time, we've been discussing plagues upon the Earth, which is the history of disease going back through the Neolithic to modern times.
Starting point is 01:22:25 Fate of Rome, which discusses the plagues and this history of the Roman Empire considering climate and biology. We also discussed What was the name of the book on slavery? The Slavery in the Late Roman World? Slavery in the late Roman world. Yeah. And the upcoming book is The Last Animal. All linked in the description below.
Starting point is 01:22:45 And where else can people find you? In your descriptions. That's it. I'm not on social media. Sorry, I got it. Well, you can find him here on this podcast. Just begin again. Exclusively.
Starting point is 01:22:57 I hope you enjoyed this episode. If you did, the most helpful thing you can do is just share it with other people who you think might enjoy it. Send it to your friends, your group chats, Twitter, wherever else. Just let the word go forth. Other than that, super helpful if you can subscribe on YouTube and leave a five-star review on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Check out the sponsors in the description below.
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