How we organize societies and power
6 key moments across 5 eras
Humans evolved in bands of 50-150 people. Everyone knew everyone. Trust came from relationships and reputation. Strangers were threats.
"Our brains evolved for small groups - larger organization requires cultural technology."
Mesopotamia
Agriculture enabled permanent settlements. Cities required new forms of coordination - writing, laws, bureaucracy, kings. Strangers had to cooperate.
"Cities invented technologies for coordinating strangers - writing, law, hierarchy."
Europe
Westphalia established sovereign nations. Nationalism created imagined communities of millions. Citizenship replaced kinship as primary identity.
"Nations are imagined communities - people who will never meet feel connected."
USA
Post-war prosperity created the suburban nuclear family as ideal. Extended family networks weakened. Consumerism replaced community ties.
"The "traditional family" is actually a mid-20th century invention."
Global
Internet created new forms of connection. Social networks transcend geography. Online communities form around interests, not proximity.
"Digital networks reorganize society around flows of information, not places."
Global
AI chatbots become companions. Virtual communities blur with physical. Identity becomes fluid across platforms. What makes community "real"?
"When AI can simulate connection, what makes human community unique?"