Thomas Neuburger

Oct 4, 20226 min

Reflections on Graeber and Wengrow’s ‘Dawn of Everything’: Introduction

If you encountered this person today, what would you assume about him? Would you think he's like you?

By Thomas Neuburger

“What a Chimera is man! What a novelty, a monster, a chaos, a contradiction, a prodigy! Judge of all things, an imbecile worm; depository of truth, and sewer of error and doubt; the glory and refuse of the universe.”
 
―Blaise Pascal, Pensées
 

 
“In the end, climate change is the only story that matters.”
 
—Charles Pierce, Esquire, September 24, 2022

As I promised here, this is the start of a series, hopefully a long one, though one that I will keep light. That is, I’ll likely have a lot to say — I’m less than halfway through the book and I already have a lot to say — but I’ll keep most of these pieces relatively brief so I can focus on one observation at a time.

This series will consist of glosses on my reading and thoughts about Graeber and Wengrow's The Dawn of Everything, and it will take the shape of a considerably down-rev version of Blaise Pascal’s Pensées. The thoughts will have a theme, and they will lead, I’m certain, to a number of certainties. After all, it was Pascal who wrote, “It is not certain that everything is uncertain,” and I’m certain he was right. (Whether we'll find that certainty for our individual selves, and if so, when — that is another matter.)

So let’s begin, first by honoring one of the authors, David Graeber. For a little independent reading on Graeber, his Wikipedia entry is a good place to start. Note especially the comment on his first major book, Debt: The First 5000 Years, which has been called “the most read public anthropology book of the 21st century.”

Note his activism, and especially his role in the Occupy Wall Street movement, which Graeber himself called “the opening salvo in a wave of negotiations over the dissolution of the American Empire.” Whether you agree or not, the fact is, Graeber agreed, which should give you a sense of how far out of the conventional box his thinking went, and how far his thinking reached into past and future. The “dissolution of the American Empire,” sans extreme external disruption, is hard to imagine happening anytime soon.

By the way, Debt: The First 5000 Years is a hell of a book, and like all of Graeber’s books, a remarkably easy read. Even in audiobook form, it’s a delight.

‘The Dawn of Everything’

Graeber and Wengrow open with this introduction. I invite you to take just a minute to read it through.

David Rolfe Graeber died aged fifty-nine on 2 September 2020, just over three weeks after we finished writing this book, which had absorbed us for more than ten years. It began as a diversion from our more ‘serious’ academic duties: an experiment, a game almost, in which an anthropologist and an archaeologist tried to reconstruct the sort of grand dialogue about human history that was once quite common in our fields, but this time with modern evidence. There were no rules or deadlines. We wrote as and when we felt like it, which increasingly became a daily occurrence. In the final years before its completion, as the project gained momentum, it was not uncommon for us to talk two or three times a day. We would often lose track of who came up with what idea or which new set of facts and examples; it all went into ‘the archive’, which quickly outgrew the scope of a single book. The result is not a patchwork but a true synthesis. We could sense our styles of writing and thought converging by increments into what eventually became a single stream. Realizing we didn’t want to end the intellectual journey we’d embarked on, and that many of the concepts introduced in this book would benefit from further development and exemplification, we planned to write sequels: no less than three. But this first book had to finish somewhere, and at 9.18 p.m. on 6 August David Graeber announced, with characteristic Twitter-flair (and loosely citing Jim Morrison), that it was done: ‘My brain feels bruised with numb surprise.’ We got to the end just as we’d started, in dialogue, with drafts passing constantly back and forth between us as we read, shared and discussed the same sources, often into the small hours of the night. David was far more than an anthropologist. He was an activist and public intellectual of international repute who tried to live his ideas about social justice and liberation, giving hope to the oppressed and inspiring countless others to follow suit. The book is dedicated to the fond memory of David Graeber (1961–2020) and, as he wished, to the memory of his parents, Ruth Rubinstein Graeber (1917–2006) and Kenneth Graeber (1914–1996). May they rest together in peace.

If you think about it, about the process by which the book was written, the work is a kind of secular “Pascal’s Pensées,” but this time brought to completion — a series of nuggets, reflections and ideas, that in the end connect together from fragments to a whole. If you read it along with me, you’ll understand what I mean. The structure feels seamless, yet the pieces, the nuggets are interesting all on their own.

Nugget 1: The History of Man

The first thought I’d like to bring to your attention is this, from the opening of Chapter 1:

Most of human history is irreparably lost to us. Our species, Homo sapiens, has existed for at least 200,000 years, but for most of that time we have next to no idea what was happening. In northern Spain, for instance, at the cave of Altamira, paintings and engravings were created over a period of at least 10,000 years, between around 25,000 and 15,000 bc. Presumably, a lot of dramatic events occurred during this period. We have no way of knowing what most of them were.

They go on to immediately discuss why people don’t think of these things, or what they do think when they do think of them, which leads most people to questions about the inherent goodness or wickedness of humans overall.

“Are humans innately good or innately evil?” is they way the authors phrass the question we ask ourselves, looking to our historical or mythical past for answers. Their comment on that question is worth quoting, as a kind of Nugget 2 for this piece:

[I]f you think about it, the question, framed in these terms, makes very little sense. ‘Good’ and ‘evil’ are purely human concepts. It would never occur to anyone to argue about whether a fish, or a tree, were good or evil, because ‘good’ and ‘evil’ are concepts humans made up in order to compare ourselves with one another. [emphasis added]

But as tempting as it may be, let’s not stay at that thought, but look at the earlier one about the loss of human history, a thought that leads to a startling implication.

We often think of our story, the story of our species, as having two parts — “history” and “prehistory.” This allows us to think very vaguely, cloud our minds completely, about almost all of what happened to our species prior to the use of writing, some 3,400 years ago. It allows us to think of ourselves not as just having two pasts (we haven’t), but also as being two beings (we aren’t).

Doing the math (3400 divided by 200,000) means simply that, if all of our history is in fact actual history, 98% of human history has been lost.

Again, that doesn’t mean that 98% of our story is prehistory, as though prehistory were some kind of foreign or mythical time, an age of legends and ignorance different from our own. That “different from our own” construct has no basis in fact.

What we do know is this — our species has lived for 200,000 years, and today we understand roughly 2% of it. What’s in the rest of the story? I invite you to put your prejudices and pre-conceived notions aside, and look at what data an anthropologist can unearth. We might then, with Pascal, be able to say, “Il n'est pas certain que tout soit incertain.” In other words, it’s not certain that everything is uncertain.

What can we learn by looking with an anthropogist’s eye at all of human history? Who, in fact, are we? That’s what this series is about.

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