Technology,gender, and history: Toward a nonlinear model of social evolution |
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Authors: | Riane Eisler |
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Institution: | Dept. Ethology , L. E?tv?s University , Budapest, Hungary |
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Abstract: | This paper presents a new nonlinear cognitive map of social evolution— sharply departing from the conventional 19th century‐based theories of linear stages from barbarism to civilization. It draws from a data base that includes the whole of humanity (both its female and male halves). And it takes into account new data from archaeology indicating that civilization is not only thousands of years older than previously thought, but originally oriented more closely to what the author calls a Partnership rather than a Dominator model of social organization. Covering over 25,000 years of social history, this article charts major technological phase changes—from the agricultural revolution circa 10,000 years ago to the industrial and more recently electronic revolutions or modern times—from the perspective of the tension between the Dominator and Partnership models. Most critically, it shows how the present period of social disequilibrium leads us to either an evolutionary breakdown or breakthrough, with the determining factor not technology per se, but rather how effectively and quickly we shift to a social organization orienting primarily to partnership rather than domination. |
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Keywords: | technology gender history nonlinear dynamics social evolution dominator model partnership model cognitive maps archaeology feminist scholarship cultural transformation theory |
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