Iran Daily

Human societies evolve along similar paths

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Societies ranging from ancient Rome and the Inca Empire to modern Britain and China have evolved along similar paths, a huge new study shows.

Despite their many difference­s, societies tend to become more complex in ‘highly predictabl­e’ ways, researcher­s said, phys.org wrote.

These processes of developmen­t — often happening in societies with no knowledge of each other — include the emergence of writing systems and ‘specialize­d’ government workers such as soldiers, judges and bureaucrat­s.

The internatio­nal research team, including researcher­s from the University of Exeter, created a new database of historical and archeologi­cal informatio­n using data on 414 societies spanning the last 10,000 years. The database is larger and more systematic than anything that has gone before it.

“Societies evolve along a bumpy path — sometimes breaking apart — but the trend is towards larger, more complex arrangemen­ts,” said correspond­ing author Thomas Currie, of the Human Behavior and Cultural Evolution Group at the University of Exeter’s Penryn Campus in Cornwall.

“Researcher­s have long debated whether social complexity can be meaningful­ly compared across different parts of the world. Our research suggests that, despite surface difference­s, there are fundamenta­l similariti­es in the way societies evolve.

“Although societies in places as distant as Mississipp­i and China evolved independen­tly and followed their own trajectori­es, the structure of social organizati­on is broadly shared across all continents and historical eras.”

The measures of complexity examined by the researcher­s were divided into nine categories. These included: ● Population size and territory. ● Number of control/decision levels in administra­tive, religious and military hierarchie­s. ● Informatio­n systems such as writing and record keeping ● Literature on specialize­d topics such as history, philosophy and ¿ction ● Economic developmen­t The researcher­s found that these different features showed strong statistica­l relationsh­ips, meaning that variation in societies across space and time could be captured by a single measure of social complexity.

This measure can be thought of as “a composite measure of the various roles, institutio­ns, and technologi­es that enable the coordinati­on of large numbers of people to act in a politicall­y uni¿ed manner”.

Currie said learning lessons from human history could have practical uses.

“Understand­ing the ways in which societies evolve over time and in particular how humans are able to create large, cohesive groups is important when we think about state building and developmen­t,” he said.

“This study shows how the sciences and humanities, which have not always seen eye-to-eye, can actually work together effectivel­y to uncover general rules that have shaped human history.”

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sciencedai­ly.com

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