Predictive History - The Story of "Civilization", "Secret History", "Game Theory" and more - Secret History #14: Legacy of the Steppes

Episode Date: February 5, 2026

Secret History #14: Legacy of the Steppes ...

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Okay, so today we are going to discuss civilization versus the steps, okay? Civilization versus the steps. The steps are the grasslands, and you, people often refer to them as barbarians, okay? So in China, we refer these people as like Yamanian barbarians. And in school, you're taught that there are major differences between civilization and barbarians, right? So the first major difference is that in civilization, you are allowed intellectual freedom. Because only by reading books, only by going to school,
Starting point is 00:00:53 only by learning how to think, can you be free to think, okay? And in the steps, we think of them as emotional slaves. They are unpredictable, they are violent. Okay? Second thing is that we think of civilization as open and curious. We love knowledge, we seek to gain more knowledge. Therefore, we are innovative, okay? Whereas the steps people, they are
Starting point is 00:01:37 static because they are insular they're close-minded okay and the last thing is that we think civilization leads to wealth and prosperity only can you be only if you are civilized can you be truly be happy okay and wealthy and we think that the steps people are poor and therefore unhappy. That is the general understanding of the difference between civilization and the barbarians, okay? The problem is that this creates a misunderstanding. And we can't really explain why is it that
Starting point is 00:02:40 throughout human history, the steps people have been the greatest conquerors. So the classic example is Genghis Khan. How is it that Genghis Khan was able to not only conquer China, which is one considered one the greatest civilizations in the world, but also Baghdad, another great civilization. But what's interesting is that throughout human history, this has been a consistent pattern where the barbarians conquered the civilized people. So this is a problem.
Starting point is 00:03:18 How is it that if in civilization, they're so free, they're so smart, they're so open, they're so curious, innovative, and so prosperous. Why is it that they keep on losing out the steps people? And the answer is because your traditional understanding is completely wrong, okay? And I will show you that it's the completely the opposite. It's the steps people who are open, curious, and innovative and it is the slicing people who are close-minded or static and who are unhappy okay so that's my argument to you today all right so let's go over
Starting point is 00:03:59 some of my points before I show you the PPP okay all right so let's discuss how civilization starts so last class we understand that there's a major river and on top of this major river you have a city develop okay Remember that we come together for religious purposes. We have settlements in order to celebrate nature, celebrate God, celebrate our religion, our belief system. And over time, what happens is that this system becomes unequal, it becomes hierarchical, and therefore we leave.
Starting point is 00:04:41 But there are some places that are strategic for trade purposes. And therefore, people don't want to leave because you can generate a lot of wealth and prosperity in these places. And so they become major cities. So the first city in World Civilization is Uruk, Urrk, okay? And over time, they become more more prosperous. They build canals.
Starting point is 00:05:07 They learn farming. They develop their own mythology. And then what happens is that as the population grows and grows, they go off and colonize other places along the trade route, okay? Maybe upstream and then downstream as well. And then what happens is that these city states are now in competition with each other. And they have a system of competition called open cooperative competition.
Starting point is 00:05:43 Okay? This is a very important concept because this concept is what gives us innovation. So you have these three things in place. Open cooperation, competition, you'll be very innovative. Open just means that you want to learn, you want to grow, you want to learn from others. Cooperation means that you are in contact with others so that you are learning the best practices from other people. Competition means that you want to be better than they are, okay?
Starting point is 00:06:12 So in this system of city-states, you have massive innovation. And we see this throughout human history, okay? So think of China. When was China the most innovative? It was during the Chun Chiu, right? The spring- autumn period. That's where we're getting Confucius from, Zhuanz, okay? All the good ideas came from this period of the Chun Chiu, okay?
Starting point is 00:06:34 This is also true for Mesopotamia. This is also true for Egypt as well. And eventually what happens is that these city states all merge into an empire because during this process of innovation, one city will be more innovative than the others and therefore they will conquer the others. What's interesting often is that it is a city that is most disadvantaged that conquers the other cities because they're forced to be more innovative. So in China, the classic example is the Qing, right?
Starting point is 00:07:12 The Qing was in the mountains. They had lower population. They were poorer, they were more isolated. And therefore, they'd be more innovative than the Tao, the, the Wei dynasties. And this is true also throughout human history. And so now you have an empire. And at first, this empire is extremely innovative. Why?
Starting point is 00:07:38 three reasons, okay? The first thing is that it now has scale, okay? It has size. Therefore, it's able to draw on more resources. Second is the idea of standardization. Sanization just means that now you're using the same monitor system, you're using the same laws, you're using the same communications network, okay? And it allows for better use of resources. Now last is the idea of centralization, meaning that you have one place controlling all activities elsewhere. That allows you to build canals, that allows you to build temples. That allows you to undertake massive public works projects, okay?
Starting point is 00:08:24 So in the beginning of the empire, there's massive consolidation of innovation, which leads to tremendous innovation, okay? But over time, what happens is the empire becomes the, becomes the opposite of an open cooperative competition system. Why? Well, first of all, it comes insular. Then it becomes secretive. And then it becomes a monopoly.
Starting point is 00:08:53 That's what a bureaucracy is. Okay, do you guys understand? Okay? All right? So when an empire reaches a certain point of growth, it becomes a bureaucracy, and therefore it kills all innovation. So this idea that civilization leads to innovation is wrong.
Starting point is 00:09:12 Civilization leads ultimately to corruption. Now, what's interesting is that even though this is a general rule of human development, it's not always true. There are exceptions, okay? So, for example, one civilization that we know that did not work out like this is something called the In This Valley Civilization, which is Martin A. Pakistan. And we'll discuss this later on. But they were actually, even though they had a city-state system,
Starting point is 00:09:50 they were actually peaceful, egalitarian, and artistic. Okay? They didn't go to war with each other. They didn't create a hierarchy. They didn't create a bureaucracy. And we'll discuss later on why this is the case. But this is something that you need to understand. Even though there are patterns to human history,
Starting point is 00:10:07 there are always exceptions to the rule. Okay? All right. So, over time, the empire breaks down. Why? Because you have a hierarchy in place. A hierarchy. A bureaucracy. The people are at the bottom. And if you are a person in empire, your life sucks. It really sucks because you're essentially a slave.
Starting point is 00:10:38 Why? Well, first of all, the empire goes to war a lot in order to protect its advantage. So they can at any time just take you to war and you get killed, okay? Second is the problem of debt. It's very easy if you are a peasant to fall in debt, you owe rent to a landlord, then you have to sell your children, okay? So debt really sucks. And the last problem is immobility,
Starting point is 00:11:09 which just means that you're stuck where you are. where you are. Okay? So the people in the empire, their lives suck, but they're stuck where they are because of war, debt, and immobility. And as we discussed last class, the bureaucracy will develop a mythology
Starting point is 00:11:28 in order to justify why they are like this. But at the very top, it's actually even more problematic. Because what happens is at the top, you will eventually have a problem of elite, overproduction. Okay? Elite overproduction just means that there are only a few
Starting point is 00:11:51 limited spots for the elite and the elite have too many children and therefore they fight, okay? They break up into different factions and each faction competes against each other for the right to be the elite. And because of this
Starting point is 00:12:11 conflict at the very top you usually have three results okay the first result is revolution where one elite tells the people to overfall everyone else okay so remember what's really important understand is the people do not create the revolution the people themselves not rebel it's always one faction of the elite help working with the people to overfo the other factions okay that's what a revolution is second possible is civil war okay where the factions have different armies and they fight.
Starting point is 00:12:45 And the third possibility is just they go to war with the empire, okay? But this is a common pattern in history. Now, what's really interesting is that as the empire falls, the pastoral people come and take over the empire, okay? The step people or the pastoralist. Pastroists just means that they don't farm for a living,
Starting point is 00:13:10 they raise sheep, goats, and cows for living, okay? They come and they take over the empire. Why is this the case? Because these people are the best fighters in the world. They have horses, they can, they have, they're archers, okay? So they're the best fighters in the world. So what often happens is one faction invites them
Starting point is 00:13:31 to be mercenaries in the struggle. And eventually they recognize, you know what? We don't have to fight for the prince. We can take over ourselves. Another thing that happens is the faction that invites the mercenaries don't have enough money to pay them off. So the mercenaries are just like, screw this, we'll take over the empire ourselves, okay? Um, and what's important to understand is that throughout all this, the pasturists are always incont of the empire through three things, okay? Through trade, through pillaging.
Starting point is 00:14:04 So the pastoral's come and steal from the people and through being mercenaries. Okay? So this is a pattern throughout human. history. So another question we have to ask is why are the pastoralists so different from people of civilization and empire? And the reason is geography. What I will show you is that people are pastoralists grow up in a different environment than the people of civilization and empire, and therefore they develop a different economy as well as mythology, as well as culture, okay? All right.
Starting point is 00:14:45 All right, let's continue. But we're clear so far, right? Okay, so in the beginning we had agriculture. Why did we have agriculture? Because as we discussed before, people came together for religious purposes. They built temples. And now you have to maintain the temples,
Starting point is 00:15:03 therefore you build farms around the temple and develop agriculture. Okay? But because of climate change and over a population, people always constantly, to move to new places. So agriculture was first up in the Middle East,
Starting point is 00:15:17 and then it went over to Europe and it went over to other places as well. So it spread around the world. So when they went to Europe, they could actually maintain their agricultural practices because the climate and the geography and terrain of Europe was conducive to agriculture. And as a result, Europe maintained
Starting point is 00:15:44 the cultural practices of the people of the Middle East, okay? And so they had, you got aitarian, artistic, and peaceful civilizations, okay? So why they were peaceful is that, first of all, women were in control. Okay, remember, it's the most natural thing to have women be part of the political class, okay? So women were in charge.
Starting point is 00:16:11 So if there was any conflict, the women would just discuss it amongst themselves and come to a harmonious conclusion, okay? They wouldn't have to fight. Second thing is there was no money because there was no property. Okay? The agriculture is something that you work on together and you share. You don't, there's no concept as private property.
Starting point is 00:16:36 Okay? So in other words, no war, no conflict. So these are the three distinct characteristics of early human society. In an agricultural society, women are usually in command. There's no sense of private property. everyone shares everything together and there's no conflict in no war people just discuss things and trade in order to reach a harmonious conclusion okay so um what this changes is that the city grows and grows and then you have a large city and so you need a proxy okay but in europe what's really important
Starting point is 00:17:10 to understand about europe is that unlike china and egypt and muslimatania it does not have a large river and therefore you cannot grow a big city in Europe okay so that allows them to maintain a pretty good life okay so when they go to Europe they're able to maintain the same cultural practices but then they go to the steps okay and the problem of steps is you cannot grow food because it's all grassland okay you cannot farm so now you have to change your cultural practice so what was happening is that these people in the steps they start to trade with people with agriculture okay also you have people in the agriculture who move to the steps and they
Starting point is 00:18:02 brought with them cows and sheep and this changed everything because you as a person you can't eat grass but cows and sheep So now what you can do is you can base your entire economy around animals as opposed to agriculture, okay? But there's certain problems with cows and sheep, okay? The first problem is that they're expensive. So now you have a concept of private property, money, and this concept didn't really exist before.
Starting point is 00:18:46 Okay? And so if I see someone, with a cow and I don't have a cow what do I want to go steal it right so this needs to conflict now war and conflict and because you have private property and war in conflict you can't have a system run by woman you need a system run by man this creates a patriarchy okay so this is a very important principle in human history these three things go together okay patriarchy money and war. Okay, three things always go together.
Starting point is 00:19:27 Patriarchy, money, and war. Okay, so this is changing the economy of the steps and it's becoming different from agriculture societies, okay? And so now they need innovations in order to deal with the new economy. So let's go over some of their major innovations. The first major innovation that's very important is the idea of lactose tolerance. You may not know this, but most humans cannot drink milk naturally.
Starting point is 00:20:04 So you need to develop the enzymes to drink milk naturally. And so they were able to do that because they were forced to rely on cows and sheep for their food. They have to learn how to drink milk. But when they learn how to eat, when they start eating meat, guess what? They became stronger and taller, okay? So for most of you in history, the people of the steps were the tallest people in the world. They were the strongest in the world, okay?
Starting point is 00:20:32 That's the first major innovation that changed their history. The second major innovation is horse riding. Why? Because the steps are a huge area, and it's flat. So you need to move around it a lot. Also remember cows and sheep eat grass. So when they eat this in this pasture and they finish all the grass, they have to move somewhere else. So the only way to protect your cows and sheep from other people is to be mobile.
Starting point is 00:21:05 And so they learn how to domesticate horses, okay, which is a major innovation. And it took a long time. And you can imagine how hard that is to do because if horses see you, what do they do? They run away. So how do you train a horse to not run away? and let the horse ride you. Well, it takes a lot and lot of effort. But because they had to do it, they managed to do it.
Starting point is 00:21:27 Okay? And so with the horse riding, now you can have another invention, which is the wheel and the wagon. Wheel and wagon. Now you can put all your stuff in a wagon and move from camp to camp. You can cover the entirety of the steps.
Starting point is 00:21:48 Okay? Does that make sense? Okay? And because of these three major innovations, you now have a different culture. So let's go over what makes their culture distinctive from other places. The first is the idea of patriarchy where men are control. And the reason why the control is because in the steps, war is a constant thing, okay? So the culture becomes very masculine, very aggressive.
Starting point is 00:22:24 It rewards aggression. It rewards courage. The other thing is that we have a patriarching place. You can have more children. When women are in charge, women tend to practice birth control. Because they want to make sure that every child is healthy and every child lives to adulthood. They want to avoid the risk of dying child birth.
Starting point is 00:22:48 They want to avoid the risk of their child dying young. But with men are in charge, they basically get women to have as many kids as possible. Also remember, in this world, there's a lot of conflict. So you need as many boys to fight as possible. But then you have a problem then. If you have a lot of children, what is, what you have a form of inheritance?
Starting point is 00:23:12 Like when you die, your cows go to who? Right? Now let's assume you have 100 cows. You have like 10 boys. If you give, if you are fair and you give 10 cows to one boy, Well, very quickly, your family is going to be poor. And because in the steps, the weather is bad, your cows are very likely to die. Well, then your entire family could be extinct in two or three generations.
Starting point is 00:23:37 So they invented a new concept called primogeniture. Primogeniture just means that the eldest boy inherits everything that ensures that the family can stay wealthy. Okay? All right? But now your problem is, wait a minute, if the eldest boy inherits everything, what do the other boys do? Well, they have to go and steal other cows, okay?
Starting point is 00:24:09 And to do that, they form secret societies. Okay? Secret societies are just like, basically these gangs, okay? These gangs of young men who get together to do what? Well, they go steal cows and sheep, and what else do they do? They steal woman, right? Right? Because, right?
Starting point is 00:24:29 I mean, like, what's the most valuable commodity in the steps? Well, cows and women, so that's what you steal. Okay, so this creates a culture of war and conflict constantly. All right. And the third innovation is something called the patron-client relationship. And this is actually how, or patronage. And this is what allows
Starting point is 00:24:58 for the construction of society in the steps. So remember in a civilization you have bureaucracy, your centralization, but in the steps, you can't have that because you can't have that many people. So you have a patron-client relationship. And all that means is that it's like a mafia, right? I'm the big brother, you're the little brother. So maybe I have 100 cows, and you need cows.
Starting point is 00:25:20 So I lend you 10 cows, but now you are loyal to me, okay? I'm the big brother, you're the little brother. And this creates the idea of tribes. Does that make sense? What's really important here is that in civilization, bureaucracy maintains control over people over debt. And so you become a slave. But in the steps, there's no concept of slavery.
Starting point is 00:25:49 You're still a free independent person, but you just pay, you're just loyal to your big brother. So your big brother needs you to do something. you go do it for him, okay? So there's still a level of freedom in the steps that you don't have civilization, and that's why they're just good fighters. Okay?
Starting point is 00:26:09 All right. So these three things are major innovations. But now that you have these innovations, you need a new mythology to justify or explain these innovations. Okay? And so what they had was, they went from the mother goddess. So mother goddess, again, is the religion of agricultural people, the sky god.
Starting point is 00:26:38 And the mother goddess wants you to be harmonious, okay? To be kind and compassionate. What does the sky god want you to do? The sky god wants you to conquer and exploit, okay? It wants you to destroy. It wants you to kill. It wants you to conquer, to steal. Okay?
Starting point is 00:27:01 And also in this religion, horses and cows are very important. But as we discussed the last class, here grain and nature are very important. Okay? So you see how this works, right? Now, what's important to understand is that because
Starting point is 00:27:24 this system does that allow for the creation of a bureaucracy, the steps always practice open cooperative competition. And it's a system that forces you to be aggressive. It forces you to be independent. And it forces you to work hard. And that's why people, the steps, are the greatest warriors in human history. And that's why when the steps people encounter the empire, civilization, they usually are able to conquer the empire. Does that make sense?
Starting point is 00:28:07 Okay? So the steps are like a training ground for fighters. And over time, the fighters have become more and more fierce. And what's ironic is those fighters who are the most fierce can stay in the steps. Those fighters who are forced other steps, they go conquer the empire. Okay? All right, it's a constant pattern in human history. All right, is that clear?
Starting point is 00:28:35 All right, any questions, guys, before I do the PPP. Great. Guys. Yes? Sorry, can you speak to the mic, please? So earlier you said that these people, they inherit their oldest son, right? So my question is, like, is it necessary for, or so they must inherit their inheritance to the oldest son?
Starting point is 00:29:17 Or is it like they have some kind of a system to determine which son can have the best of their inheritance. Okay, yeah, so their general principle is always the eldest son, okay? That's to avoid conflict. Because if you open up to say, okay, well, whoever is most brave, whoever is most noble, whoever is most wise, that means that they'll just fight each other, okay? This is what happened after the death of Genghis Khan, right?
Starting point is 00:29:45 So the general rule is you always give it to the eldest son. But what if the eldest son has been manipulated by his siblings? It doesn't matter. It does not matter, okay? All right. All right, so legacy of the steps. All right, so as I discussed, what's happening is that Europe, at first was just hunter-gatherer, okay?
Starting point is 00:30:07 And they were spread out, they did paintings and caves. They had a pretty easy life, okay? Not an easy life, but it was a free life. And over time, what would happen is that agriculture would develop in the Middle East, and it would spread to Europe. And you can see the genetic change where the blue is hunter-gatherer and the orange is farmers. Okay, but then what happened in about 2500 BCE is the steps people, who we call the Yamnaa actually.
Starting point is 00:30:38 So different names, they're Porto Indo-Europeans, the Yamaya. You can refer to them as any, okay, steps, Yamnaia, Porto-Indo-European, it doesn't really matter. But they go to Europe as well and they start mixing with the, farmers. What's really important for our purpose to understand is this. When the farmers went to Europe, they went as families, husband, wife, children. And so they integrate into Europe pretty peacefully, okay? But when the pasturists, the Yamaya, went to Europe, they went mostly as young men. Therefore, that they kill the local man in order to marry their wives. Okay? And so basically, from DNA research,
Starting point is 00:31:28 we know that it was a genocide. Okay, the European farming men were eliminated by the pastoralists. Okay? And we have to want to remember that the pastoralists, they were stronger, okay? They were taller and they were more aggressive. Okay?
Starting point is 00:31:53 All right, yeah, so this is another map that shows same thing what you need to understand is this this movement is global okay so the farmers went to Europe but they also went to India and Iran okay they basically went wherever they could go same thing with the Yamaya okay so this is the Yamaya people they went to Europe but they also look at this they also went to Iran and India and we know because we study the languages Persian okay Hindi and European languages, they're basically the same languages. So we know there had to be one common mother language to them.
Starting point is 00:32:38 So there's another map showing you the Yamaya. Again, they went to Europe, but they also went to India, as well as Iran. And by mixing with local customs and religion, they created new religions that had tremendous impact on world civilization. So in Iran they will give birth to Zoroastrianism, which we'll discuss later on, okay? And these are the Vestas, which is the Bible of Zoroastrianism. In India, they of course gave birth to Hinduism, and these are the Vitas, which is the Bible of Hinduism.
Starting point is 00:33:17 We'll discuss this later on in the semester, but I want you to be aware of this, okay? So again, we know that this happened at first because of linguistic studies. studies. When we look at different languages, we discovered there are common words to them. So let's look at father, okay? When Latin is Patar, Greek, Patras, Persian, Padar, Hindi, Pita. Pretty similar, okay? Similar with mother. Mother, Matar, Mitterra, Modor, Matt. So we, so from different linguistic studies, we know they have to be a common language to all of them. And that's why we hypothesize about the proto-Indo-Europeans. This is a more stark example. where the proto-Indo-European 2 is Dua, okay?
Starting point is 00:34:01 And you can see how it spreads to other languages in the Proto-Indo-European family so that you go from Tuwa to Tuwa to Tuo to 2 in English, okay? So all these languages are interrelated. That's why if you speak one, like English, it's pretty easy for you to learn the other languages as well. Whereas if you speak Chinese, it doesn't really help you
Starting point is 00:34:22 when you go learn other languages, okay? All right, now linguists have done studies of words that are distinct to proto-Indo-European. And these are the words that they discover, okay? Bo, cow, ox, ram, eel, dog, grain, cauldron, wrestling, wealth, households, families, clans. These words are unique to their culture. And therefore, we're able to group these words together and discover their four characteristics, okay? First of all, they have lots of words for wheel. They have words for dairy.
Starting point is 00:34:58 They don't have farming terms, and they have words for horse, okay? That's why we're able to figure out that these are nomadic pasturists. Therefore, they must be from the steps. Okay? And then through archaeology and DNA studies, we're able to have a better understanding of who they are. Okay, and as I said, they have to be pasturists, okay? Because of the way they use words.
Starting point is 00:35:23 So let's talk about old Europe before the United come and conquer them. So this is Maria Gumbutas, who is an American Lutheranian anthropologist. And she's the first to hypothesize that old Europe must have been conquered by these people because she did an archaeology and discovered that their culture was primarily peaceful, and honored woman, and it espoused egalitarianism. This is exactly what I said previously. And the Yemeni people were completely different. They were a patriarchy, who had private property, which was very aggressive, okay?
Starting point is 00:36:05 She wrote many books, the language of the goddess, and she, like, her work is amazing, okay? So if you have a chance, please do study her work. And so let's read what she wrote, okay? So this is a mother goddess civilization, something that we thought we'd discuss a lot in this class. The goddess in her manifestations was a symbol of the unity of all life in nature. Her power was in water and stone, in tomb, in cave, in animals, and birds, snakes, and fish, hills, trees, and flowers. Hence, the holistic and mythopoic perception of all the sacredness and mystery of all there is on earth. Okay?
Starting point is 00:36:41 So again, this is a religion that practice balance and harmony because ebbing is sacred. Therefore, you cannot destroy life without first getting permission from the mother goddess, okay? This culture took deep delight in the natural wonders of this world. Its people do not produce lethal weapons or build forts in acceptable places as their successors did, even when they were acquainted with metallurgy. Instead, they built magnificent tombs, shrines, and temples, comfortable house in moderately sized villages, and created superb pottery and sculptures. This was a long-lasting period of remarkable creativity and stability and age free of strife.
Starting point is 00:37:18 Their culture was a culture of art. Okay, so this is a very nice place. They don't fight, they're egalitarian, they practice art. Okay, and what's really important for us to understand is they had writing systems, they had technology, they just chose not to use it for war because it was against their religion. So they also had writing systems and they had symbols, okay, and this is something that Merriy Gumbentes has done a lot of research in. I won't go into their writing system.
Starting point is 00:37:53 So when the Yemnai came, they basically completely invert the culture. So for example, the Europeans, the old Europeans believed that the snake was symbol of light energy and regeneration, most benevolent, not an evil creature. It was a Yemna who introduced the idea that the snake is a devil, okay? And that's where we get the concept in the Bible from. black to them is a good color. White is a bad color. White because black symbolize life.
Starting point is 00:38:22 White symbolizes death, right? Black did not mean death or the underworld. It was the color of fertility, the color of damp caves, and rich soil of the womb of the goddess where life begins. White on their hand was the color of death of bones. And again, when they're an eye come, they will invert this. What's really important to understand is in this society, women are in control their power an agency and why well it turns out that this book Sex at Dawn
Starting point is 00:38:50 Sex at Dawn okay it turns out that women are just better at managing social relationships than men are okay so this is Sex at Dawn by Christopher Ryan and he tries to show us that for most of human history women had sexual agency and one piece of evidence is the fact that human men have larger penises, in fact the largest penises of all primates, okay? So gorillas are much bigger than we are. We have bigger penises. Why?
Starting point is 00:39:22 Because we have to compete in order to put our semen into women, right? Because women have multiple sexual partners. So that's one major advantage of sexual freedom for women. Men have bigger penises, okay? All right. Even when women had long-term intimate partners, husbands, they had sexual partners okay so the idea is that for most of the human industry love and sex went out the same thing love is intimacy sex is just fun okay in some societies
Starting point is 00:39:54 women would have many husbands usually brothers okay and that's a way to maintain peace and harmony in your society okay if a woman is allowed to marry many brothers together all right so the book looks at the military the military Millie some people where they practice sexual freedom for women. And their explanation is that seaman was essential to human growth and development. Okay. So if a bride got married, then all the men would come and impregnant her because the idea is that seaman is sacred and they want to give her as much life as possible. Okay.
Starting point is 00:40:35 All right. Now, you may be discussed by this, okay? But I think there's a very good kind of argument. Okay, so the argument is that it's not honorable for women to love anyone except her husband and that this evil being among them He himself was not sure that his son was their present was his son okay So the system sucks because if you're a guy how do you know that that person is your son and the natives respond by saying you French people okay, so he's talking about the French missionary you French people love only own children but we are We all love all the children of our tribe, okay?
Starting point is 00:41:18 So that's what humans can do. We can love each other. There's no limit to our love. So in the system that we have today, a patriarchy, we only love our own children. But in their system, the aging system, everyone loved each other's children, okay? Everyone loved all children.
Starting point is 00:41:34 And quite honestly, in this system, it's better be a child, right? And in this system, you would never ever develop depression, okay? Okay? All right. Again, women are just better politicians than men because women are more willing to cooperate, women have more emotional intelligence, and women can use sex and gossip as mechanism of control, okay? So this is all pretty common sense.
Starting point is 00:41:58 All right. But then question then is, if this world is so wonderful, why did it collapse? Well, there are three major issues with agriculture societies, okay? The first major issue is that it's static, it does not innovate. The second major issue is climate change. If the weather changes on you, you're screwed. The third problem is disease, right? Because you're living close to animals.
Starting point is 00:42:21 You're living close together. So if a disease hits you, you're all screwed, okay? And that's very different from the seps people who live far apart from each other, okay? All right, so we know that in Europe, the farmer communities, the population went collapse, okay? So this is the level of carbon dioxide in the air. We can measure the level of carbon dioxide in the air.
Starting point is 00:42:42 We know that about the year 3000 BCE, the population collapsed, okay? All right, it collapsed everywhere in Europe. Why this happened? The plague, guys, okay? That's a problem with being a farmer. You are always susceptible to the plague. So we know that maybe, you know, 4,000, 5,000 years ago, a plague broke out, okay?
Starting point is 00:43:06 The black death, basically, by rats, okay? And remember, in this world, we trade with each other. So the black death was able to go everywhere and wipe out farming communities, okay? Even spread as far as China. Okay, but the thing though is the steps people are not as impacted because they live far apart from each other. So if one got the disease,
Starting point is 00:43:27 you're not going to spread to your entire family, or sorry, your entire community. Whereas a farming community, they will, okay? So there's this huge drop in the population because of black death in Europe, okay? That's number one. Number two is climate change. So we know that now and then there's this huge climate change and that destroyed agriculture, forcing people to migrate.
Starting point is 00:43:49 And this is what we suspect happen in old Europe as well. Okay? And so what's happening now is that because your society is static, because of disease, because of climate change, the population in Europe went all the way down, leaving the NIR opportunity to come invade, okay? And they did come invade. So as you can see, when the agriculture people came, they came as families, okay? So the blue is the man, the red is the woman, okay? So one to one, they go into Europe.
Starting point is 00:44:19 But when the Yamaya come, they come as young men, okay? So it's mainly blue, okay? And of course, what do young men do? They come and they steal your woman, okay? That's what young man do, do guys. All right, and over time, what they will do is slowly establish new cultures because what's happening is that their culture is blending with other cultures as well and what this is happening is the geography is different right
Starting point is 00:44:47 so in the steps they have a certain culture when they move to our culture they now have to combine their culture the local ones and this happens in everywhere producing different cultures and producing different languages as well okay so all of Europe was radically transformed the because of this migration. And again, this migration, it was basically a genocide. So you look at Britain, okay? The people who built Stonehenge are gone.
Starting point is 00:45:19 This is a farming agricultural community worship the modern goddess, okay? They had all this wonderful science technology that's not lost to us, because what would happen is the Nile would come and kill everyone, okay? So this is the blue is the farmer people, the reds of Naya, total genocide, okay guys.
Starting point is 00:45:35 Men and women were all killed. Why? Because maybe they chose, the men and women chose to fight together. In Spain, it's a different story because what happened is that all the men would be replaced. So the white chromosome is the male chromosome. So before the year 2000 BC, you had a lot of blue, right?
Starting point is 00:46:00 But as you can see, if you move further, it's all gone. They killed all the men in Spain. When they went to India, it's a different story. because Indians in that time were more peaceful. So they came to a settlement where the new conquerors would be at the top society and the people would be and the locals would be at the bottom, okay? So there wasn't that much of a genocide,
Starting point is 00:46:22 but we had a caste system created because of that, okay? And we know because if you look at the upper caste, they all spoke Indo-European. If you look at the lower caste people, they spoke the local language, Dravidian. Does that make sense? So depending on the circumstance, the result is different.
Starting point is 00:46:42 All right. Okay. This is a wonderful book called The Horse, the Will, and Language written by David Anthony, who's a Harvard anthropologist. And he explains to us the Anaya culture and why they were so dominant. So one thing that is unique to the Amnaya is their mythology.
Starting point is 00:47:04 It's a mythology of violence, of struggle, of dominance, of conquest, okay? And how the mythology works is, in the beginning, there were two brothers, twins. One named man and the other name twin. They go around by the world and they're accompanied by a great cow. Eventually, man and twin decide to create the world we now inhabit. If you do this, man had to sacrifice twin. He had to kill his own brother, the person he loved in order to create the world.
Starting point is 00:47:31 And the gods thanked him for that. The gods blessed him for that. So this is a world that is pretty violent, okay? After the world was made, the sky gods gave cattle to third men. The cattle were stolen by a three-headed, six-eye serpent, the snake. Third men entreated the storm got to help get the cattle back. Together they went to the cattle of the monsters, killed it, and freed the cattle, okay? So this is a mythology of struggle, okay?
Starting point is 00:48:03 And what's really interesting is that this mythology becomes the mythology of all new, total Indo-European civilizations, including the Romans and the Mongolians, okay? So this is Genghis Khan. His mythology is what? He kills his best friend to become the leader of the Mongol people. And what's the Roman mythology? Romance kills his twin brother to found Rome. Okay?
Starting point is 00:48:31 All right? So that shows you that the Mongols and the Romans, they come from the same culture. A culture based on violence and exploitation. Alright, so now Anthony talks about the economy. Domesticated cattle and sheep started a revolutionary change in how humans exploited the Pontiac Caspian steppe environment. Because cattle and sheep were culture, like humans, they were part of everyday work and worry
Starting point is 00:48:55 in a way never approached by wild animals. Humans identified with their cattle and sheep were apportioned about them and used them as currency in marriage gifts, debt payments, and the calculation of sorts. and the calculation of social status. Now we have the beginning of money and property, right? And they were grass processors. They converted planes of grass, uses, and even hostile to humans
Starting point is 00:49:16 into wool, fed, clothing, tents, milk, yogurt, cheese, meat, marrow, and bone, the foundation of both life and wealth. Cattle and sheep herds can grow rapidly with little luck, vulnerable to bad weather and theft. They can also decline rapidly. Herding was a volatile boom-bust economy and required a flexible, opportunistic social organization. So they live in a world of tremendous volatility
Starting point is 00:49:38 because the entire world was a cattle. If the cattle died because of a bad storm or because of bad luck, they were completely screwed. So they were very aggressive people and they were opportunistic as well. That's different from farmers who can just afford to sit back and relax because nature will grow the food for them.
Starting point is 00:50:00 Okay, the connection between animals, brothers, and power was a foundation on which new forms of male-centered ritual and politics develop among Indo-European speaking societies. This is why the cow and brothers occupied such a central place in Indo-European myths relating to how the world began. So this is a deeply patriarchal society. All right. All right. Participation in long-distance trade, give exchange, and a new set of cults requiring public sacrifices and feasting became the foundation for a new kind of social power. Stock breeding is by nature of volatile economy. Herders who lose animals always borrow from those who still have them.
Starting point is 00:50:41 The social obligations associated with these loans are institutionalized among the world's pastoralists as a basis for a fluid system of status distinctions. Those who loan animals with acquired power over those who borrow them and those who sponsored fees obligate their guests. Early proto-Indo-European included a vocabulary about verbal contracts bound by oaths used in later religious rituals to subsistive the obligations between the week and the strong okay all right so the idea here is there's no slavery in the system okay but there is obligation there's loyalty if i take you out for a meal guess what now you owe me a meal if i take you out for a meal you're not i'm now your big brother okay and that's what keeps the society cohesive and this is important because if known it's a slave and everyone's free
Starting point is 00:51:29 then everyone is a great warrior because you're fighting for yourself okay you're not fighting because someone asked you to. That's why in wars between empires and these people, these people usually win. Because they're much more motivated. All right. Well, military power and a more productive hurting system probably brought prestige and power
Starting point is 00:51:51 to the identities associated with proto-Indo-European dialects after 33 BCE. The guest host institution extended the protections of old-bound obligations to new social groups, an Indo-European-speaking speaking patron could accept and integrate outsiders as clients about shaming them or assigning them permanently to submissive roles as long as they
Starting point is 00:52:08 conducted the sacrifices properly. Praise poetry of public feast encourage patrons to be generous and validated the language of the songs as a vehicle for communication with the gods regulated, everything. Okay. So another way we're saying this is that even though there are wealthy people and poor people, they are still treated with respect. It's a very egalitarian society. Okay? And what keeps the system in place is the belief in the gods. Okay? To believe that if I do your favor, then you owe me in a favor.
Starting point is 00:52:41 We have a contract now. The gods oversee the contracts. And what's really important is that this is an open-ended system, so it's easy for me to bring in more people into this system. Okay? Okay. And that's why, again, they were such an innovative, cohesive, and open society. Okay, the last thing we'll talk about are these young men who enter secret societies.
Starting point is 00:53:07 And they enter secret societies and become, you know, like this mafia gangs, okay? The institution of the Moribon, the warrior brotherhood of young men bound by oath to one another and to ancestors during a richly mandated raid has been reconstructed as a central part of proto-Indo-European initiation rituals, okay? It's a very important part of society because these young men otherwise have no place to go. And if you want to know who they are, they're raising the Vikings, okay? So the Vikings are the direct descendants of these people. All right. All right, so let's talk about the Mongols.
Starting point is 00:53:47 The Mongols conquer the world, most of the world, and the question is, how do they do it? And I've already told the answer, okay? Because the steps people have always been good at conquering empires. These are the Mongos. The secret weapon, of course, is a horse archer. This is like the ultimate weapon for most of human history. You could not defend against a horse archer.
Starting point is 00:54:11 They were fast, they were strong, and these were the best warriors in the world. So this has been considered a pattern in human history. First, the Yamai came and conquered Europe, India, and Iran. But then you have the Scythians, okay? Same place, same people, same culture. Guys, this is not a race of people. This is a culture of people, okay?
Starting point is 00:54:36 Because remember at this time in human industry, genetic exchange is very common. The Scythians were dominant. Then you have the Medians who would later on give rise to the Persian Empire, okay? Sorry. Oops. Okay, then you have, sorry, can you see this?
Starting point is 00:55:01 Okay, so now what's going to happen is this. you're going to have you're going to so the steps people are all around the grassland now China emerges as an empire and this is the Han empire and this is the really last Chinese dynasty
Starting point is 00:55:17 why? Because they are ethically Chinese and they're proud of who they are so what they're going to do is they're going to try to destroy the steps people once and for all okay so they move a huge army into the steps to try to limit the threat and what happens now is
Starting point is 00:55:31 it forces a cascade effect where these people are now forced to go westwards, which forces the conflict with people over here. Okay? And so you have this huge migration all the way to the Roman Empire. Okay? Okay. So this is what the map shows us.
Starting point is 00:55:49 Okay, China forces the Huns, the Shunnu, westwards, which enforces these other groups to go elsewhere, okay? So again, the strongest people stay in the steps, the weakest people go and conquer empires. Okay? This is a process of constant innovation. The Han Empire, okay? Atila Han.
Starting point is 00:56:14 Then you have the Turks emerge. This is the Mongol Empire, and as you can see, they conquer mostly most of the world. And because they conquer most of the world and the world is unified, then you have the black death, okay, which wipes out most of Europe as well. About a third of Europe is wiped out in the black death. And the last great conqueror is timber lane, Timber the Lane, the last great conqueror from the steps and he conquests most of the world, okay? So this is really important principle,
Starting point is 00:56:48 remember, the steps people are the most innovative, the most open, the most aggressive, the most courageous. And that's why they're the greatest conquerors in history. But eventually what happens is we develop gunpowdered, okay? And now the steps will be conquered by civilization. But this is the turning point in history. the venture of gunpowder.
Starting point is 00:57:09 And so now what's going to happen is that civilization will now attack the steps people and reduce the step people culture. Okay? And that is it. All right. Okay, any questions, guys? So I was wondering, like, so the Bambarians, the steps, are they capable of developing religions? Because they're all conquering all around the world.
Starting point is 00:57:38 it's difficult for them to like build up temples right okay so religions don't require temples religion is just collective belief so as i say as you keep on saying in this class all humans have a religion okay a religion is just a worldview understanding of how the world works that answers three questions where do we come from why are we here where we going okay even today even though we're atheists we're still religious okay but we worship money, materialism, science. So these people of the steps, they worship the horse, the sky god, the cow. They worship war.
Starting point is 00:58:19 They worship courage and bravery, okay? So every culture, every person has a religion of some sorts. Because it's impossible for you to understand the world and operate in the world about a religion, okay? Especially for groups. Okay, any more questions? Okay, great, guys. So we'll continue our discussion of human history next class.

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