This lecture series is a delightful roam through the multitude of attempts humans made at ordering themselves after the agricultural revolution produced far too many of us. Civilizations struggle to hold themselves together as they hurl themselves apart. And boy, do they. As Professor Dise tells the story with his excellent radio-voice, it all depended on what guy was in charge, how long he lived, and what guys ran the show next door. Institutions beyond paying tribute, slavery, and genocide seem rare. Ordering all those many humans was left mostly to chance, just as Alexander Hamilton suggested. But moral governance can be seen as a glimmer commencing with the first extant law codes of Sumerian king Ur-Nammu, ca. 2100 B.C., three centuries after the non-surviving Code of Urukagina (referenced by others) in Urukagina’s combat with corruption, and three centuries before Hammurabi’s code, parts of which find their way into the Ten Commandments.
One thing, in particular, stood out for me from this 2009 series. In referencing the Greek’s impression of the “good old days” when “men were men” and the heroes of Homer did their part to Make Greece Great Again, Dise hits upon something eternal. “It was the values of these warrior heroes that destabilized civilization. Heroic cultural values are characterized by immature and insecure masculinity. A masculinity that must always be proven and re-proven. A masculinity that is [thin-skinned] to insult and criticism, that’s easily affected and only with difficulty soothed. A masculinity whose emotions are poorly controlled, prone to fits of rage, characterized by an inability to see beyond one’s ego. An obsession with personal honor that produces a hypersensitivity to insults and results in frequent outbursts of violence. In other words, these are not values of the hero, but the values of a bar-brawling red neck. They glorify violence, hunting, fighting, and warfare, and they’re contemptuous of the ways of peace. Diplomacy and negotiation are disdained as effeminate; raiding is preferred to trading. Heroic values make good epic poetry, but they make bad government. A society that does not evolve beyond heroic values is a society that is doomed because they are the values that produce instability rather than stability that a healthy society requires… However flattered the values of heroic culture may be to the heroes themselves, they’re values that shatter the security of the world around them. Values that point toward doom unless they’re replaced with something more adult.”
Given America’s current state of self-inflicted upheaval and decline with the label of “strong man” applied to weak men, this sounds like some kind of universal law.