appassionato, to bookstodon
@appassionato@mastodon.social avatar

The Collapse of Complex Societies

Political disintegration is a persistent feature of world history. The Collapse of Complex Societies, though written by an archaeologist, will therefore strike a chord throughout the social sciences. Any explanation of societal collapse carries lessons not just for the study of ancient societies, but for the members of all such societies in both the present and future.

@bookstodon





Scotter,
@Scotter@newsie.social avatar
BackFromTheDud,
@BackFromTheDud@mas.to avatar

@mutinyc Yeah, "More than one kind of Anarchist". The problem with Anarchism is this: Nobody can actually tell you what it is! "Without Leaders" is a wonderful concept, because it means that as nobody makes decisions, nobody is to blame when things go wrong!
Ah well, another Mute. @Grizzlysgrowls @appassionato @bookstodon

kenthompson, to bookstodon
@kenthompson@mastodon.world avatar

Anna Karenina, by Leo Tolstoy. You are a young Russian woman living in the late 19th century, where a successful romance seems quite impossible for the obliviously wealthy; you try to break the mold but the mold wins. 4 of 5 library cats 🐈 🐈 🐈 🐈.

@bookstodon

jofagobe,
@jofagobe@masto.ai avatar

@kenthompson @bookstodon One of the best Wordsworth covers I've seen.
Tolstoy did a great job creating these characters and making them evolve (or not) throughout the book. He's also never too lenient nor overly harsh in how he presents Anna, in a way that shows how he finds her actions reproachable, but still a consequence of her social/gender situation.
What did you think about the Levin/Lievin/Lyovin and Kitty storyline?

kenthompson,
@kenthompson@mastodon.world avatar

@jofagobe @bookstodon The Kitty storyline ended very unsatisfyingly for me; it seemed built for contrast to Anna’s, but didn’t really deliver on that, at least for me.

bibliolater, to philosophy
@bibliolater@qoto.org avatar
Oozenet,
@Oozenet@mastodon.social avatar

@bibliolater @philosophy That's because it's "a meditative practice developed over the last two millennia or so by Buddhist monks and nuns in south and southeast Asia. In its native habitat, it forms one part of a well-polished toolkit". Stripped of those other parts its dangerous.

https://www.ecosophia.net/the-flight-from-thinking/

ericmacknight,
@ericmacknight@mastodon.social avatar

@Oozenet @bibliolater @philosophy Excellent article!

StevenSaus, to autisticadvocacy
@StevenSaus@faithcollapsing.com avatar

This... this hit, and Occam (along with what I know of sociology and economics and such) all track wit h this insight as well.

@autisticadvocacy

StevenSaus,
@StevenSaus@faithcollapsing.com avatar

@stonebear @autisticadvocacy @Zumbador

There's a good part of me that wonders if there's a correlation between a wider range gender expression (and relationship diversity, perhaps) and the neurospicy tendency to look at conventions that have no reasoning behind them and then ignore the (stupid) conventions and just do what makes sense/ feels "correct" to us.

I am a cishet dude, so I may be VERY VERY off-base here. Thoughts?

stonebear,
@stonebear@hachyderm.io avatar

@StevenSaus @autisticadvocacy @Zumbador I don't think you're too far off base; certainly close enough to get back on if you see the catcher try to throw you out...

Though, speaking from experience, sometimes we need a clue-bat (or two or three) to realise that those conventions are questionable at all... but once one assumption gets yanked out of the normativity Jenga stack, there's a high potential for the whole thing to come crashing down.

In a good way.

dianor, to random
@dianor@strangeobject.space avatar

How the world works, a small anecdotal observation:

On my commute there is a construction site where a lane is fully closed to traffic. But, you can drive towards this spot on two open lanes.

Everyday I look at how the second lane, the one everyone knows leads to a dead end gets filled with the Teslas, BMWs, Audis and other such cars of the world. The drivers cut the entire line like this and then expect to be given way when they reach the dead end. It disrupts traffic, it causes accidents, it is simply unnecessary.

But they always cut in line.

These are the people who think the world exists for them and them only, the capitalists or wanna-be capitalist of this world. The people who think they always come first because that is literally how the system treats them everywhere else. The right wingers and conservatives who are oh so oppressed.

And it is always a minority. By a vast margin. Most people patiently sit in line and are forced to give way to these asshats.

#society

erinwhalen, to random
@erinwhalen@mindly.social avatar

Love this story about a Toronto man who created an app that makes it easier for restaurants and catering companies to reduce food waste by donating it to shelters and charities.

According to the article, so far his company has diverted approximately 15,000 kilograms of food waste — enough to feed 25,000 people.

I hope this company or something similar starts operating in more cities across North America!

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/surplus-food-delivery-app-1.6912325

appassionato, to bookstodon
@appassionato@mastodon.social avatar

What's Our Problem?: A Self-Help Book for Societies

From the creator of the wildly popular blog Wait But Why, a fun and fascinating deep dive into what the hell is going on in our strange, unprecedented modern times.

@bookstodon



Barros_heritage, to anthropology
@Barros_heritage@hcommons.social avatar

Society can be understood as something that only exists as long as actions are performed, as long as processes take place, as long as we all contribute in some way to its ephemeral construction.

"Social organization is messy and refractory, a shambles rather than a crystal […]. There is no tidy atom and no clear-cut world, only complex striations and long strings that reptate as in a polymer goo" (White, H.C. (2008), Identity and control, Princeton, Princeton University Press, p. 18).

@romulus88
@romulus88
@sociology
@anthropology
@academicchatter

Barros_heritage, to politicalscience
@Barros_heritage@hcommons.social avatar

Graeber, David; Wengrow, David. The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity (2021)

I have already finished reading this long and powerful book. Now I have to meditate on the ideas it brings...

"Over the course of these chapters we have instead talked about basic forms of social liberty which one might actually put into practice: (1) the freedom to move away or relocate from one’s surroundings; (2) the freedom to ignore or disobey commands issued by others; and (3) the freedom to shape entirely new social realities, or shift back and forth between different ones."

@anthropology
@archaeodons
@politicaltheory
@politicalscience
@academicchatter

PopResearchCtrs, to demography
@PopResearchCtrs@sciences.social avatar

New data show that about half of U.S. adults lived alone upon gray divorce, another one-third lived with others, and the remaining 14% lived with a new partner. Adults living with a new partner tended to exhibit the most advantaged sociodemographic profiles.

Read more: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36842065/

@demography

sethabrutyn, to sociology
@sethabrutyn@sciences.social avatar

Fewer words are sweeter than "your manuscript has been accepted." My theory of social trauma - integrating collective and cultural processes and grounding them in the neurophysiology of social pain - will soon see the light of day in and

@sociology
@sociology

bibliolater, to science
@bibliolater@qoto.org avatar

Niva, V., Horton, A., Virkki, V. et al. World’s human migration patterns in 2000–2019 unveiled by high-resolution data. Nat Hum Behav (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-023-01689-4 @science

CarstenBuus, to bookstodon
@CarstenBuus@masto.ai avatar

The adtech-based corporatization of the Web has empowered an emotionally unintelligent, racist, sexist, ageist (etc.) and hypercapitalist tech industry that is fueling a global mental health crisis while profiting off disinformation and destabilizing democracies.

“The psychology of Silicon Valley. Ethical threats and emotional unintelligence in the tech industry.” Cook 2020. Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-27364-4

@bookstodon

bibliolater, to histodons
@bibliolater@qoto.org avatar

L K Bertram, The Other Little House: The Brothel as a Colonial Institution on the Canadian Prairies, 1880–93, Journal of Social History, Volume 56, Issue 1, Fall 2022, Pages 58–88, https://doi.org/10.1093/jsh/shac018 @histodon @histodons

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