Brazilian Journal of Political Economy (Oct 2020)

How competition drove social complexity: the role of war in the emergence of States, both ancient and modern

  • EDUARDO ALBERTO CRESPO,
  • TIAGO NASSER APPEL

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/0101-31572020-3055
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 40, no. 4
pp. 728 – 745

Abstract

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ABSTRACT The origin of human ultrasociality - the ability to cooperate in huge groups of genetically unrelated individuals - has long interested evolutionary and social theorists. In this article, we use cultural group or multilevel selection theory to explain how cultural traits needed to sustain large-scale complex societies necessarily arose as a result of competition among cultural groups. We apply the theory at two key particular junctures: (i) the emergence of the first States and hierarchical societies, and (ii) the Rise of Modern Nation-States and the associated Great Divergence in incomes between the West and the “Rest” that began in the eighteenth century.

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