Real Clear Politics  / Real Clear Science
 
 
September 25, 2013  
 
War Drove the Rise of Civilizations
By  _Akshat  Rathi_ (http://www.realclearscience.com/authors/akshat_rathi/) 


According to British historian Arnold Toynbee, “History is just one damned  
thing after another.”

 
Or is it? That is the question Peter Turchin of the University of 
Connecticut  in Storrs tries to answer in a new study just published in the 
_Proceedings of the National  Academy of Sciences_ 
(http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1308825110) . He and his colleagues show 
history may be  deterministic, at 
least to a certain extent. Their computer simulations show  that warfare may 
have been the main driver behind the formation of empires,  bureaucracies and 
religions. 
Historians may be a bit leery about scientists making this sort of attempt, 
 since history is driven by a complex set of events, some of them seemingly 
 one-time only. But Turchin thinks otherwise. Through an approach he calls  
cliodynamics (named after Clio, the Greek muse of history), he wants to 
unravel  the past by testing hypotheses against data. 
For his latest work, he joined with Thomas Currie, a lecturer in cultural  
evolution at the University of Exeter. In the new study, they use a computer 
 simulation to model the largest societies in the years between 1500 BCE 
and 1500  CE. 
Their model uses a map of Africa and Eurasia split up into cells that are 
100  kilometres on each side. The properties of each cell are its natural 
landscape,  height above sea level and the possibility of agriculture (which 
was the main  driving force behind societies). The borders are seeded with 
military  technology, starting with the use of horses. That technology then 
spreads as  societies fight it out virtually. What emerges is the probability 
that each cell  of land could or could not be occupied by civilisations as 
time progresses. (Note: Red depicts higher probability of existence of a  
civilisation and green lower.)  
 
“Remarkably, when the results from the simulation are compared with real 
data  from the past, the model predicts the rise of empires with 65% accuracy,”
 Currie  said. If military technology is removed as a factor, the model’s 
accuracy falls  to a mere 16%. “It seems warfare created intense pressure 
that drove these  societies.” 
Other researchers such as Jared Diamond and James Robinson have suggested,  
respectively, that agriculture and social institutions drove civilisations. 
They  undoubtedly contributed, but Turchin and Currie argue that their 
results show  that competition through warfare may have played a more important 
role. 
Peter Richerson, emeritus professor at the University of California at 
Davis,  studies cultural evolution and is impressed by cliodynamics. “It is 
early days  yet, so the specific hypothesis tested here is liable to prove 
wrong 
or at least  incomplete,” he said. “The model fails to predict the 
emergence of large empires  in Central Asia. Something not in the current model 
is 
going on there.” 
Currie agrees. “Our results are a good fit because of the broad scale. We 
are  aware we are glossing over many complexities,” he said. Still, there is 
lots of  potential value in building these models. The global database of 
historical  events has many gaps. With _efforts  underway_ 
(http://www.nature.com/news/human-cycles-history-as-science-1.11078)  to grow 
these databases 
through all the information that  historians, archaeologists and social 
scientists can find, the models are bound  to get better.

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