xenohumanist said in #2864 2w ago:
Samo Burja's thesis is that civilization is part of the "extended human phenotype", as dam building is in the beaver's phenotype, and older than we think. In this model, properly savage hunter-gatherers are either more associated with nearby civilization than, more the remnant of earlier collapsed civilization, or more peripheral to the trunk of human experience than we would expect. "Civilization is older than we think":
https://www.palladiummag.com/2021/05/17/why-civilization-is-older-than-we-thought/
This rhymes with the xenohumanist conjecture, which is that the "human" person is the natural form of social intelligence: Once you have language, selves, politics, culture, construction, and reflective uncertainty, you have the human condition, and the intelligent beings exposed to this environment will converge on the spiritually and socially humanoid. They will be "humans in funny suits". That is, the human is not a tiny island in a vast sea of possible intelligent beings, but most of the space of viable possibility.
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/Zkzzjg3h7hW5Z36hK/humans-in-funny-suits
(Remember: the viable range of human ways of being, even in our own heritage even in the last 100 years, is much larger than the range of modern behavior. This is about something more fundamental than early 21st century office manners. The point is as much to widen the range of what you can recognize as human as to narrow your expectation of alien behaviors. On the other hand, the Aztecs, the closest thing we've ever seen to an alien civilization, share more in common with us than can be accounted for by common descent alone. The thesis is that there is strong sublinearity in behavioral distance vs relatedness, strong convergence to a large but finite basin of attraction.)
The application of xenohumanism to the "extended phenotype" thesis is that our familiar upright ten-fingered form is what you get when you make humans out of apes. We are humans wearing ape suits. We are the (partial) result of apes hitting the critical threshold of the humanoid attractor basin. Once you start to create a "humanoid" environment (tools, building, sociality, culture, language, politics, etc), there is a strong pressure to adapt yourself to that environment. Samo's thesis is that that feedback between human nature and constructed environment reached a relative fixed point equilibrium at the civilization-dwelling human. Further, his thesis is that we have been in this relative equilibrium for on the order of tens to hundreds of thousands of years.
Our own time is not representative of the last hundred thousand or even ten thousand years of the human experience. Partially this can be accounted for by archeological loss, but it demands further explanation.
There is probably a small positive eigenvalue in the feedback process, such that we continue to slowly develop civilization and humanity to further heights limited by evolutionary speed or something.
The sluggishness may be because civilization does not select for civilized man but rather decivilized man (eg the underclass, the freed slave, the antimodern separatist breeder minority, and the welfare queen), and thus civilization is not limited by evolutionary speed but rather self-limiting, and our recent divergence (past one to three thousand years) is an aberration soon to be "corrected".
Dr Alamariu's thesis (following Drews) is that this recent divergence was caused specifically by militarism, which allowed a civilization-building warrior class to sustainably (see feudal fertility patterns) impose themselves on the retrograde apish substrate. But in both ancient and modern times and this seems to have reached a limit where civilization became dysgenic again.
All of these may be true together. We need to understand this in order to understand what the human really is, and where we're going.
https://www.palladiummag.com/2021/05/17/why-civilization-is-older-than-we-thought/
This rhymes with the xenohumanist conjecture, which is that the "human" person is the natural form of social intelligence: Once you have language, selves, politics, culture, construction, and reflective uncertainty, you have the human condition, and the intelligent beings exposed to this environment will converge on the spiritually and socially humanoid. They will be "humans in funny suits". That is, the human is not a tiny island in a vast sea of possible intelligent beings, but most of the space of viable possibility.
https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/Zkzzjg3h7hW5Z36hK/humans-in-funny-suits
(Remember: the viable range of human ways of being, even in our own heritage even in the last 100 years, is much larger than the range of modern behavior. This is about something more fundamental than early 21st century office manners. The point is as much to widen the range of what you can recognize as human as to narrow your expectation of alien behaviors. On the other hand, the Aztecs, the closest thing we've ever seen to an alien civilization, share more in common with us than can be accounted for by common descent alone. The thesis is that there is strong sublinearity in behavioral distance vs relatedness, strong convergence to a large but finite basin of attraction.)
The application of xenohumanism to the "extended phenotype" thesis is that our familiar upright ten-fingered form is what you get when you make humans out of apes. We are humans wearing ape suits. We are the (partial) result of apes hitting the critical threshold of the humanoid attractor basin. Once you start to create a "humanoid" environment (tools, building, sociality, culture, language, politics, etc), there is a strong pressure to adapt yourself to that environment. Samo's thesis is that that feedback between human nature and constructed environment reached a relative fixed point equilibrium at the civilization-dwelling human. Further, his thesis is that we have been in this relative equilibrium for on the order of tens to hundreds of thousands of years.
Our own time is not representative of the last hundred thousand or even ten thousand years of the human experience. Partially this can be accounted for by archeological loss, but it demands further explanation.
There is probably a small positive eigenvalue in the feedback process, such that we continue to slowly develop civilization and humanity to further heights limited by evolutionary speed or something.
The sluggishness may be because civilization does not select for civilized man but rather decivilized man (eg the underclass, the freed slave, the antimodern separatist breeder minority, and the welfare queen), and thus civilization is not limited by evolutionary speed but rather self-limiting, and our recent divergence (past one to three thousand years) is an aberration soon to be "corrected".
Dr Alamariu's thesis (following Drews) is that this recent divergence was caused specifically by militarism, which allowed a civilization-building warrior class to sustainably (see feudal fertility patterns) impose themselves on the retrograde apish substrate. But in both ancient and modern times and this seems to have reached a limit where civilization became dysgenic again.
All of these may be true together. We need to understand this in order to understand what the human really is, and where we're going.
referenced by: >>2865 >>2868
Samo Burja's thesis