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Today we live in what Ulrich Beck has aptly characterized as a
"risk society" shaped by intensifying crises outside of our control
and seemingly outside of our comprehension. The master narrative
that was supposed to lead us to secular salvation-economics-has
proved to be a large part of the problem rather than the much
anticipated solution. In The Anthropology of Complex Economic
Systems, Niccolo Caldararo offers a much more radical and
challenging answer: that the fundamental assumptions on which the
modern "science" of economics has been erected are false, and that
it is through the medium of anthropology, particularly the
relatively neglected field of economic anthropology, that an
alternative and sound basis for both the understanding of economic
behavior and for the shaping of economic futures can be
constructed. Caldararo not only challenges the foundational
assumptions of conventional economic theory, but situates economic
behavior (something quite different and universal amongst human
beings) in both a historical and an ecological context.
Contemporary discussions of "sustainability," especially in the
field of development studies, have oddly neglected to look to
anthropology. Economic anthropology, is the repository of a vast
store of wisdom both about actual alternative and workable economic
systems and about their evolution. By drawing on this source,
Caldararo builds a model of the evolution of human economies which
stir up substantial debate, shows how economic anthropology
provides a tool for the interrogation of economic theory, and ties
economics to ecology. It has been the rupture of this fundamental
relationship that lies at the basis of much of our present crisis
and the unsustainable economic patterns that humans have created.
By bringing together in a new configuration economic anthropology,
ecology, and culture history, Caldararo not only proposes a new
model of human social evolution, but equally importantly creates a
methodology for speaking to, and against, our present economic and
environmental situation.
This book examines why humans have big brains, what big brains
enable us to do, and how specialized brains are associated with
eusociality in animals. It explores why brains expanded so slowly,
and then why they stopped growing. This book whittles down the
theories on brain size evolution to a few that represent testable
hypotheses to identify logical and practical explanations for the
phenomenon. At the core of this book is data derived from original,
previously unpublished research on brain size in a number of social
mammals. This data supports the idea that evolution of the brain in
humans is the result of social interaction. This book also traces
the products of the social brain: ideology, religion, urban life,
housing, and learning and adapting to dense complex social
interactions. It uniquely compares brain evolution in social
animals across the animal kingdom, and examines the nature of the
human brain and its evolution within the social and historical
context of complex human social structures.
Today we live in what Ulrich Beck has aptly characterized as a
"risk society" shaped by intensifying crises outside of our control
and seemingly outside of our comprehension. The master narrative
that was supposed to lead us to secular salvation-economics-has
proved to be a large part of the problem rather than the much
anticipated solution. In The Anthropology of Complex Economic
Systems, Niccolo Caldararo offers a much more radical and
challenging answer: that the fundamental assumptions on which the
modern "science" of economics has been erected are false, and that
it is through the medium of anthropology, particularly the
relatively neglected field of economic anthropology, that an
alternative and sound basis for both the understanding of economic
behavior and for the shaping of economic futures can be
constructed. Caldararo not only challenges the foundational
assumptions of conventional economic theory, but situates economic
behavior (something quite different and universal amongst human
beings) in both a historical and an ecological context.
Contemporary discussions of "sustainability," especially in the
field of development studies, have oddly neglected to look to
anthropology. Economic anthropology, is the repository of a vast
store of wisdom both about actual alternative and workable economic
systems and about their evolution. By drawing on this source,
Caldararo builds a model of the evolution of human economies which
stir up substantial debate, shows how economic anthropology
provides a tool for the interrogation of economic theory, and ties
economics to ecology. It has been the rupture of this fundamental
relationship that lies at the basis of much of our present crisis
and the unsustainable economic patterns that humans have created.
By bringing together in a new configuration economic anthropology,
ecology, and culture history, Caldararo not only proposes a new
model of human social evolution, but equally importantly creates a
methodology for speaking to, and against, our present economic and
environmental situation.
This book examines why humans have big brains, what big brains
enable us to do, and how specialized brains are associated with
eusociality in animals. It explores why brains expanded so slowly,
and then why they stopped growing. This book whittles down the
theories on brain size evolution to a few that represent testable
hypotheses to identify logical and practical explanations for the
phenomenon. At the core of this book is data derived from original,
previously unpublished research on brain size in a number of social
mammals. This data supports the idea that evolution of the brain in
humans is the result of social interaction. This book also traces
the products of the social brain: ideology, religion, urban life,
housing, and learning and adapting to dense complex social
interactions. It uniquely compares brain evolution in social
animals across the animal kingdom, and examines the nature of the
human brain and its evolution within the social and historical
context of complex human social structures.
In 2005 I wrote a letter to the Financial Times describing the
unsustainable nature of the financial instruments (derivatives)
then being sold as insurance to protect investors from losses in
other assets, failure of institutions and other untoward events.
The complexity of these instruments and the magical nature of their
acceptance by investors led me to an examination of modern economic
practice from an anthropological perspective. The flight from risk
that derivatives represent is an ancient component of vertebrate
life and is embedded in the caching of many animals. Other aspects
of modern economics are residues of the history of human survival
in simple exploitation of resources. The problem with the financial
foundations of modern capitalism is that they are rooted in trends
of social ideology that have come to be a structural component of
economic and political entities since the development of economic
systems in the late Neolithic. We have been a genus, that of Homo,
for about 2.5 million years, and a species, that of sapiens, for
perhaps as much as 200,000 years, but over either period, the type
of means by which we made a living was hunting and gathering. This
strategy required continuous mobility and cooperation between band
members. The nature of our current survival strategy, that of
complex society only began about 10,000 years ago in the earliest
sedentary communities. So one might say that our current life style
is new, adapting and tenuous. I described the central aspects of
this ideology in my 2004 book, Sustainability, Human Ecology and
the Collapse of Complex Societies, published by the Edwin Mellen
Press. The purpose of this present book is to clarify the
mechanisms by which this ideology has come to permeate most all
religious as well as political belief systems and create conditions
for financial booms, busts and economic hardship.
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