The question of how human societies
evolve from small groups to the huge, anonymous and complex societies of
today has been answered mathematically, accurately matching the
historical record on the emergence of complex states in the ancient
world.
Intense warfare is the evolutionary
driver of large complex societies, according to new research from a
trans-disciplinary team at the University of Connecticut, the University
of Exeter in England, and the National Institute for Mathematical and
Biological Synthesis (NIMBioS). The study appears this week as an
open-access article in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The study's cultural evolutionary model predicts where and when the largest-scale complex societies arose in human history.
Simulated within a realistic
landscape of the Afro-Eurasian landmass during 1,500 BCE to 1,500 CE,
the mathematical model was tested against the historical record. During
the time period, horse-related military innovations, such as chariots
and cavalry, dominated warfare within Afro-Eurasia. Geography also
mattered, as nomads living in the Eurasian Steppe influenced nearby
agrarian societies, thereby spreading intense forms of offensive warfare
out from the steppe belt.
The study focuses on the interaction
of ecology and geography as well as the spread of military innovations
and predicts that selection for ultra-social institutions that allow for
cooperation in huge groups of genetically unrelated individuals and
large-scale complex states, is greater where warfare is more intense.
While existing theories on why there
is so much variation in the ability of different human populations to
construct viable states are usually formulated verbally, by contrast,
the authors' work leads to sharply defined quantitative predictions,
which can be tested empirically.
The model-predicted spread of
large-scale societies was very similar to the observed one; the model
was able to explain two-thirds of the variation in determining the rise
of large-scale societies.
"What's so exciting about this area
of research is that instead of just telling stories or describing what
occurred, we can now explain general historical patterns with
quantitative accuracy. Explaining historical events helps us better
understand the present, and ultimately may help us predict the future,"
said the study's co-author Sergey Gavrilets, NIMBioS director for
scientific activities.
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