David Wengrow
Article
David Wengrow is a recurring person in the Astral Codex Ten archive, appearing 2 times across 2 issues between June 10, 2022 and August 11, 2023. The archive places it in contexts such as “a co-authored book by David Graeber and David Wengrow”; “I would love to hear a debate between Henrich and David Wengrow”. It most often appears alongside Africa, Asia, Europe.
Metadata
- Category: People
- Mention count: 2
- Issue count: 2
- First seen: June 10, 2022
- Last seen: August 11, 2023
Appears In
Related Pages
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- Africa (2 shared issues)
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- Asia (2 shared issues)
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- Europe (2 shared issues)
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- Ice Age (2 shared issues)
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- Neolithic (2 shared issues)
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- Rousseau (2 shared issues)
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- The Dawn Of Everything (2 shared issues)
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- 50,000 BC (1 shared issues)
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- Achilles (1 shared issues)
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- ACX (1 shared issues)
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- Adam Smith (1 shared issues)
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- Altamira (1 shared issues)
External Links
Source Context
Recovered passages from the original issue text. When the raw archive preserved outbound links inside the source passage, they are listed directly under the quote.
It’s a co-authored book by David Graeber and David Wengrow. The Davids. First, we have David Graeber, anthropologist, famed author of Debt: the First 5,000 Years, notable figure in the 2008 Occupy Wall Street movement, a playful but snarky writer, almost certainly the reason for the section titles being the way they are, and now deceased at the relatively young age of 59, just several weeks before The Dawn of Everything was published, victim of a totally inexplicable and blazingly fast case of necrotizing pancreatitis. The surviving David, David Wengrow, is lesser known but more erudite, more pragmatic, classically academic both in his pedantry but also in his impressive armament of archeological knowledge, and it’s Wengrow who’s been trying to fill the shoes of the more famous Graeber by making the post-publishing media whirlwind tour, sometimes to visible discomfort as he goes on long-winded lectures while the hosts try hastily to cut to the next segment.
I’ve been suggesting a critique, or waving my hand in the direction of one, but let me tell you how much there is in this book. There’s the introduction to the basic theory of cultural evolution – the psychology that lets humans have cultures and how ideas can transmit themselves down generations. There’s the definition of WEIRD psychology, including dispositionalism (the tendency to explain people’s actions by their innate character), and the tendency to categorize rabbits with cats not carrots; and the fact that even the famous Big Five traits of personality psychology don’t generalize very well beyond the WEIRD countries. There’s a taxonomy of the institutions that help human groups scale up their cooperation, starting with unilineal clans – the basic unit of intensive kinship, and the blind alley that most human societies got stuck in, on Henrich’s account – and including segmented lineages, age sets and premodern chiefdoms and states. (This is a very scientific, comparative approach to anthropology. I would love to hear a debate between Henrich and David Wengrow, whose book The Dawn of Everything, reviewed in ACX here, takes a much more voluntarist approach, starting from the view that there are many ways to organize a society, and that rational collective institutional design is pretty much a human universal.)
Inline links: here