The Dawn of Everything is a book by an archaeologist David Wengrow and an anthropologist David Graeber who methodically dismantle the simplified view of the progress of human civilization. That we went from small bands of hunters-gatherers to tribes, to agriculture, to cities, to empires and ended up with our current idea of nation states, which is supposed to be the pinnacle of societal development.

Turns out, this is simply not what happened, and modern archaeological data suggests that many societies around the planet and throughout history tried many different ways of organizing their living:

All of this is written based on real archaeological data and prior work by other researchers. It's a thick book full of references, which makes it hard to read: you have to constantly switch between the text and the references, as half of them are not just titles of other works, but long full paragraphs that should have really been a part of text. Plus, the first third of the book is really like a preview to the rest of it, where they regurgitate and repeat a lot of the points stated earlier.

Here's a few random facts and tidbits I found fascinating that stuck in my head:

My only big regret from the book is that it doesn't really tell you how to fix our society and make it more fair. And it doesn't claim to try. What it does is it recalibrates the discourse and asks better questions: not "what is the source of societal inequality" but rather "how did we get stuck in our current state for so long". Ultimately, we should be able to build whatever society we want, and we should look in the past at least for good examples.

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