Social inequality in the evolution of human societies

Author:

Derluguian Georgi1

Affiliation:

1. New York University Abu Dhabi, UAE

Abstract

The author develops ideas about the origin of social inequality during the evolution of human societies and reflects on the possibilities of its overcoming. What makes human beings different from other primates is a high level of egalitarianism and altruism, which contributed to more successful adaptability of human collectives at early stages of the development of society. The transition to agriculture, coupled with substantially increasing population density, was marked by the emergence and institutionalisation of social inequality based on the inequality of tangible assets and symbolic wealth. Then, new institutions of warfare came into existence, and they were aimed at conquering and enslaving the neighbours engaged in productive labour. While exercising control over nature, people also established and strengthened their power over other people. Chiefdom as a new type of polity came into being. Elementary forms of power (political, economic and ideological) served as a basis for the formation of early states. The societies in those states were characterised by social inequality and cruelties, including slavery, mass violence and numerous victims. Nowadays, the old elementary forms of power that are inherent in personalistic chiefdom are still functioning along with modern institutions of public and private bureaucracy. This constitutes the key contradiction of our time, which is the juxtaposition of individual despotic power and public infrastructural one. However, society is evolving towards an ever more efficient combination of social initiatives with the sustainability and viability of large-scale organisations.

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine (Co. LTD Ukrinformnauka)

Reference33 articles.

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3. Anderson, P. (1974). Passages from antiquity to feudalism. London: New Left Books.

4. Arrighi, G. (2010). The long twentieth century: Money, power, and the origins of our times (Rev. ed.). London, England: Verso.

5. Boehm, C. (2001). Hierarchy in the forest: The evolution of egalitarian behavior (Rev. ed.). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

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