lpetrich
Contributor
I think that climate fluctuations are a much stronger hypothesis than lower CO2 concentration, because they can have a strong effect on what plants can be grown at any one site.
The authors then consider social constraints on Holocene adoptions of agriculture, stating that "perhaps 20% of the world remained as hunters and gatherers until nineteenth-century European expansion", likely referring to land area with human inhabitants. Their list:
The authors then consider social constraints on Holocene adoptions of agriculture, stating that "perhaps 20% of the world remained as hunters and gatherers until nineteenth-century European expansion", likely referring to land area with human inhabitants. Their list:
- "First, social organization is not particularly observable by outsiders. Social institutions are enacted in a diffuse network of everyday interactions, punctuated by public rituals and ceremonies of uncertain meaning to outsiders."
- "Second, institutional innovations are more difficult to try out than technical ones. At least some minimum number of individuals must understand and subscribe to an institutional innovation for it to begin operating. Its success or failure may take a generation or more to evaluate." - while it's much easier to experiment with new crop plants.
- "Third, game theorists tell us that repeated games have many equilibria. Most likely, social systems tend to be locally stable, and when events destabilize one equilibrium, the search for a new one will be heavily constrained by history (Greif 2006)." - meaning that they are likely to be stuck in some local equilibrium state rather than a global equilibrium. Thus rejecting Panglossianism.
- "Fourth, to the extent that institutions evolve by a process of cultural group selection, rates of change will tend to have millennial timescales (Soltis, Boyd, and Richerson 1995)."