Why We Drink
The anthropological roots of humanity's love of booze

My superpower is that I don't get hangovers. Not because I don't drink: I've been falling-down drunk on multiple occasions. But I'm always fine the next morning, much to the chagrin of my groaning companions fumbling for the Alka-Seltzer. I don't know why this is. I've always attributed it to some sort of Northern European genetic gift—like I've been built to survive in frigid atmospheres, hiking through snow with a baby on each hip, swigging from a flask of aquavit.
Not everyone is well-adapted to drinking alcohol. Some quickly become nauseated, get flushed, and generally find drinking very uncomfortable. As Edward Slingerland suggests in Drunk, you might expect that to be adaptively useful, from an evolutionary standpoint. Those who don't drink may be more productive members of society: They are more likely to show up to work on time, less likely to get into pointless fights or fall into ditches. You might expect a nondrinking tribe to have overtaken its alcohol-buzzed neighbors with its industriousness and civil harmony. By this logic, a biological imperative to avoid drink would have spread and become dominant.
But this has not happened. Evolution has spoken, and teetotalling has not overtaken the world. The alcohol-tolerant among us are hardly a dwindling group, its disadvantages notwithstanding. So Drunk sets out to answer the question of why we drink. Not just the cultural and social explanations, but why we keep doing it despite its destructiveness.
Most cultures are drinking cultures, and those who historically didn't make alcohol have used some other intoxicant, such as opium or marijuana. Human beings are better able than most other mammals to tolerate booze, allowing us to eat overripe fruit that has started fermenting—just as we are better able to benefit from other intoxicants. Many of the chemicals we take as recreational drugs are plant toxins, intended to ward off herbivores from eating that plant. But they hit the pleasure receptors in our brains (even if some, such as ayahuasca, also come with unpleasant side effects). We seem to have an unerring ability to find these substances too: "Among traditional societies," Slingerland writes, "if there is something in the biome that has psychoactive properties, you can be sure that the locals have been using it for millennia." The desire to get comfortably numb leads us to overlook all kinds of tedious production processes and other costs, such as bouts of vomiting.
Our longstanding taste for alcohol and other intoxicants shows that from the earliest days that humans were aware of reality, we've been seeking means to get away from it. And these escapes have had different social meanings: from the spiritual use of particular drugs to the everyday numbing of pain or boredom with alcohol (or cannabis, or whatever is available).
Brewing, one of our most widespread sources of intoxication, has long been considered to be a byproduct of settled agriculture: We had excess grain, so we turned it into beer. Slingerland considers the possibility that that's backward: that brewing was the original intention and bread the byproduct. Growing archaeological evidence supports this thesis, which in turn suggests that "the first large gatherings of people, centered on feasting, ritual, and booze, happened long before anyone had come up with the idea of planting and harvesting crops." One possible reason for this, Slingerland adds, is that intoxication can solve a lot of problems in a complex society, such as the issue of getting strangers to cooperate.
Alcohol is a social lubricant. We let our guards down when drunk, and this isn't always a bad thing. Many of us have experienced the shortcut to friendship that comes with having a few drinks with someone. Likewise, drinking is such an expected part of certain social interactions that the nondrinker can seem standoffish and unfriendly. In European cultures, drinking from a common cup (a "loving cup") became a part of ritualized bonding. Not just drinking at the same time, but imbibing from the same vessel, was a sign of unity. The chief example of this, of course, is the communion chalice. Sharing a drink brought us together.
Building community over a glass comes with a price, however.
Human ingenuity took our natural ability to consume some alcohol, which worked well for centuries with wine and beer, and turned it up to 11 with the development of distilling. Slingerland argues that our ancestral bodies were not ready for 90 proof substances, and that drinking cultures centered around hard liquor (as opposed to the Mediterranean style of wine with a meal) are the destructive ones. He describes this difference as "Southern" (wine or beer, with food) vs. "Northern" (vodka, whenever). The "problem" is not the wine glass but the shot glass.
This view was shared by William Hogarth, whose famous 1751 illustrations of "Gin Lane" and "Beer Street" showed the supposed social chaos caused by gin, as opposed to the harmony and peace of the beer-drinking district. Hogarth was responding to the change in drinking culture when Londoners started hitting the hard stuff in the "gin craze" of the 18th century. Under the new king, William of Orange, the government had lifted restrictions on distilling, making gin more widely available and cheap. This in turn inspired the first "intoxicant panic," as the government backtracked and started imposing more regulations.
Aside from the negative effects on our liver and long-term health outcomes, alcohol can offer more immediate risks. Liquor is often to blame when a young man's last words are "Hey, watch this!" As much as a pub crawl might fuel friendships, it can also damage relationships. Insults (and punches) thrown under the influence can be a source of lasting regret.
And booze has shaped our social interactions in other ways. Most drinking cultures are also masculine cultures; historically, pubs and taverns were not women's spaces. Drink is the language of men in the public sphere, men in battle, men at the negotiating table. Drinking brings bravado as well as bonding. There are some physiological reasons for this: Men tend to be larger than women and thus are often able to metabolize alcohol more quickly. They can drink more and survive. But we can see lingering differences beyond this. When the price of vodka plummeted in Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Slingerland points out, life expectancy for men fell a full six years—a difference scientists have attributed largely to the suddenly cheaper booze.
Consider the opinions offered by various national health bodies on how much it is safe for each sex to drink. In the different countries in which I've lived, the advised amount for me to drink has been set at wildly different levels, reflecting those societies' variously prohibitive attitudes toward drinking, and particularly toward women drinking. In the U.S., I am supposed to stay below 98 grams of alcohol per week. But in Spain it's OK for me to drink up to 170 grams. (I, and my drinks cabinet, metaphorically reside in Madrid.)
To answer the question of why we drink, Slingerland surveys widely, from game theory to studies on alcohol in animals. I'm not convinced that corvids' problem-solving abilities have much to do with my preference for a chilled glass of Viognier. But he makes a strong case for alcohol's centrality for cultural development.
Drunk: How We Sipped, Danced, and Stumbled Our Way to Civilization, by Edward Slingerland, Little, Brown Spark, 384 pages, $29
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So with drink, the harder it gets the worse it is, in contrast to certain other habits one could name.
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The Arabs invented distillation of alcohol, then banned it. Go figure.
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Sorry to go off-topic, but this is just your daily reminder that McAuliffe will win in Virginia. 🙂
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"Liquor is often to blame when a young man's last words are "Hey, watch this!" As much as a pub crawl might fuel friendships, it can also damage relationships. Insults (and punches) thrown under the influence can be a source of lasting regret."
My understanding is that being drunk when attempting suicide increases the success rate substantially. Something about alcohol seems to put the survival instinct to sleep. That might seem like a bit disadvantage in the big game of survival, but there were strategic upsides in the ancient world.
Generals in the ancient world wrote extensively about the need for alcohol on campaign. When you're standing in a phalanx, victory depends on standing your ground when the man next to you and in front of you was being stabbed to death. The army that wins is the army that doesn't turn and run.
Generals wanted their men to be a certain amount of drunk.
Alcohol consumption allows large groups of people to interact peacefully. It also allows for "off the record" socialization and leads to greater inventiveness and scientific progress. Prohibition wasn't just a bad idea because of crime and the lack of freedom, it led to a significant reduction in patent applications, as did the COVID lockdowns.
Animals use their fangs and claws to increase their own chances of survival by killing prey, and they use their fangs and claws to defeat other males and to increase their own chances of reproducing.
I was trying to respond to the question of evolutionary explanations for why we drink, and if tipsy warriors were less likely to flee in fear, that would have an alcohol consuming tribe or culture a real advantage.
Don't forget the plant eaters that grow horns or antlers to compete with other males. They don't need alcohol because they usually have more than enough hormones running through their systems during the rut that their minds are more than sufficiently altered to literally bang heads.
Alcohol happens to be antibacterial, so fermented beverages are useful in battle so your troops aren’t dying of thirst or dying of diarrheal cramps.
Fresh clean water being difficult to come by in centuries past, it’s hardly surprising that fermented beverages were associated with health.
It’s not about intoxication. It’s about not being sick all the damn time from drinking bacteria-laden filth.
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Got a third way through this meandering “look at me” blog post and stopped. Sorry about the spirited wine.
Bit of a rum bush, wasnit?
No no, no need to apologize. We don’t want you to keep it all bottled up!
All I know is someone brought a bottle of “hard” root beer over to our house for a get together. It’s been sitting in our garage fridge for months, so I tried it last night —- the most vile alcoholic drink one could imagine outside of downing cough syrup.
I can't help but wonder if the "sitting in your garage fridge for months" might be a key factor. Most alcohol, especially within the "beer" realm don't have long shelf life.
And even real spirits like scotch, if not kept in the dark can change their flavor.
My father in law left me a 40 year old bottle of Southern Comfort. It was the STRANGEST tasting alcohol i have ever tasted in my life! It was not unpleasant, in the least, but just completely bizarre, like whiskey from another planet.
I'm going off topic to talk about the KillAllRednecks sock.
Yesterday Chuck P. mentioned that a good friend of his had recently died, and KAR started harrassing him, calling his dead friend a pig and such, which is par for the course with lefties.
However then he took shit way to far.
Chuck P. had mentioned enough information about his friends death that KAR was able to find a story about it and the man's name. KAR then assumed the dead friend's real name and started posting that he was in hell and his wife and kids would join him unless they stopped being Mormons.
You can see for yourselves here: https://reason.com/2021/10/29/bidens-new-spending-framework-promises-to-do-everything-but-still-cost-nothing-that-doesnt-make-sense/?comments=true#comment-9182998
This may be the worst thing I've ever seen done here in the comments. It's light years over the line and I think we should do something about it.
Which lefty troll do you guys think is running the KAR sock? Is it DOL? Sqrlsy? Shrike? or sarcasmic? It doesn't really fit Jeff or White Mike's MO.
Pure speculation.
One of them was banned before, allegedly because he wasn't smart enough to realize that what he linked to was so awful and egregious that it would get him banned. And it would need to be someone really dumb like that. Our prisons are full of people who aren't smart enough to realize that what they did was not only illegal but stupid. And if we're looking for a troll that was too stupid to realize that was over the line, we might look at someone who's shown himself to be that stupid before.
That being said, there's no reason to think some of these trolls are any smarter than each other. It could by any of them or even someone else.
I don't suppose Reason appreciates stuff like that, and they can look at the IP address. I don't suppose they can afford to assign people to monitory this stuff either. You may need to bring it to your attention. I would only add that there is something you can do yourself. We should minimize our interactions with the trolls by using the mute button. If we've got problems with cockroaches, we shouldn't be leaving dirty dishes in the sink overnight, and interacting with trolls is like leaving dirty dishes in the sink overnight.
It was only topped when Buttplug was posting child pornography and Reason apparently chose the same path that the Chicago Blackhawks did with their situation.
It fits Shrike. Sqrlcasmic is a vulnerable narcissist.
And, notice, that no one even brings up Tony's name, because deep down we love our little hare-lipped retarded monkey, and no matter how much shit he throws at us from his cage, we can never think of him in the same way we do buttplug.
Shut up about it and just mute the moron. Him and racist mike and hihn and sarcastic and squishy squirrels and all the morons.
Yep - I have several idiots muted because it's easy and idiots say idiotic things that are not worth reading.
Also, once an idiot, always an idiot.
Or it's another troll. Not too hard to believe that there are 5 annoying trolls.
Flag and/or mute and get on with life.
How could be be a city there without a party house such as club or pub.Best regards Hunk TV Apk Tq.
What a bizarre article! Treats plants producing strange things which humans consume is somehow marvelous and unusual. How are fruits any different? Immobile plants bribe mobile animals to help spread their seeds. Film at 11.
Here's some real news: plants don't give a shit. There was no plant ancestor which woke up one morning and thought, "Hey, how about if I encapsulate my seeds in a tasty pouch that animals will eat and shit out a day later somewhere else, thus providing fertilizer to help my offspring grow string and tall and make me proud."
Does this author have any inkling of how evolution works, how random it is, how many seeds go to waste so that a few can survive and propagate whatever chance mutations (and a whole lot of good luck) might have contributed to them being chosen instead of those other seeds with less useful mutations (and some lesser amount of good luck)?
Or maybe the author got paid per word. If I got paid per word for reading, I might have, but I didn't, so I skimmed.
I’m sure Baylen Linnekin knows how evolution works, and if he engages in anthropomorphizing plants it is just because he is using the same rhetoric that is commonly used when talking about evolution.
And, of course, he gets paid by the word. He writes about the same length column every week. Why is the idea of a writer’s getting paid by the word an objectionable thing to a supposed libertarian?
My mistake: this is the Gulliver article. Same argument — I’m sure she knows how evolution works.
Oh for Pete's sake! If you have never heard of the insult "getting paid by the word", then you need to get out and about more.
Civilization was invented so we could get drunk and party together. The earliest stone ruins known (at Gobekli Tepe in Turkey, from 11,000 years ago) were built not by aliens, or as a fortress, or even a trading post, but as sort of an early Burning Man party zone:
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/sep/01/social-drinking-moderation-health-risks
From this evidence, researchers conclude that Göbekli Tepe was a vast festival site where Stone Age men and women came to feast and to drink beer by the trough-load. Humans have known how to party for a very long time, it would seem. In fact, our love of alcohol can be traced even further into the past, according to scientists who now believe that social drinking played a key role in our evolution as we developed into big-brained, social primates.
“There is nothing which has yet been contributed by man, by which so much happiness is produced as a good tavern or inn.” Samuel Johnson was on to something when he wrote that in 1776. Getting together for a beer has done more than just create a sense of community; it helps sustains physical ones. City planners agree that local bars and pubs hold unique social value when included in a neighborhood. An essential element to sustainable communities is the presence of a “third space.” The term, coined by sociologist Ray Oldenburg, refers to “places where camaraderie and joviality occurred, where we can enjoy one’s company outside of home (the ‘first’ space) and work (the ‘second’ space).” These brick-and-mortar locations level out social hierarchies and help forge connections.
https://time.com/5407072/why-beer-is-most-popular-drink-world/
Alcohol is also a great way to preserve water, which is a very big problem once you get a town over a few 100 people and you don't know anything about basic sanitation.
Spain has a culture of drinking booze at pretty much every meal (and there are many meals)- it has also one of the worst water tables in Europe.
We drink because we are alcoholics. I forget why we started.
To forget.
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Ronald Reagan, Harry Anslinger, Billy Graham--and Dana Farnsworth's entire band of AMA quacks rushed before looter committees to ban every known alternative to recreational yeast pee. Men with guns fanned out to enforce Bidennacht laws banning anything that might be designed in the future, no matter how safe, effective and healthful--on the off chance that it might cut into the alcohol cartel's market. Perjury, coercion and entrenched medical malpractice are the main reasons "we" drink.
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"To answer the question of why we drink, Slingerland surveys widely, from game theory to studies on alcohol in animals."
Historians have long noted that humans began consuming alcohol (beer and wine thousands of years ago, and then gin, vodka and whiskey several hundred years ago).
It was one of the only safe ways to get a drink.
"I'm always fine the next morning, much to the chagrin of my groaning companions fumbling for the Alka-Seltzer. I don't know why this is."
I'd wager it's as much a matter of what else one drinks in addition to the alcohol quantity. Vodka isn't much more than alcohol and water but fancy drinks often pack in lots of sugar and other bits that all combine to add to the hangover. How many people think about how much more methanol is in red wine compared to white wine, never mind the other congeners that can add to the severity of a hangover?
I never got hangovers when I was young, and it didn't matter what stupid mixing and concoctions I did. Some people don't have whatever's in the physiology for it to affect them.
Now that I'm (much) older, I still don't get hangovers but I have a couple of drinks and I'm ready for bed.
Always drink on an empty stomach. The body absorbs and burns the alcohol first. Eat later and no hangover.
Hmm. Not always a good plan in my experience.
“ Some quickly become nauseated, get flushed, and generally find drinking very uncomfortable.”
You know who else found drinking very uncomfortable?
Ted Striker
Furiously Rabid Man?
Joe Biden?
Brigadier General Jack D. Ripper?
C'mon folks, this is too obvious:
"'Cause it's Friday
'Cause it's Monday
'Cause it's a charcoal burnin' Sunday
'Cause we ain't gonna get to one day
That's why we drink
'Cause the sun's up
'Cause it's sundown
'Cause my wound up needs a little unwound
'Cause we've been workin' all day but we're done now
Yeah, that's why we drink
'Cause they're ice cold
'Cause it's hot out
'Cause we're Jon Boat sittin' with the line out
'Cause we're a little messed up, but it's cheaper than a dang old shrink
'Cause we're grown up
'Cause we're still kids
'Cause we love doin' things 'cause our daddies did
'Cause it's alcohol abuse if you pour one down the sink
Yeah, that's why we drink
'Cause our team lost
'Cause our team won
'Cause Sweet Home Alabama just came on
'Cause we're lookin' for a reason to raise one
Yeah, that's why we drink
'Cause they're ice cold
'Cause it's hot out
'Cause we're Jon Boat sittin' with the line out
'Cause we're a little messed up, but it's cheaper than a dang old shrink
'Cause we're grown up
'Cause we're still kids
'Cause we love doin' things 'cause our daddies did
'Cause it's alcohol abuse if you pour one down the sink
Yeah, that's why we drink
To good friends, good times, you and me
To the red, white and blue boys and girls overseas
'Cause they're ice cold
'Cause it's hot out
'Cause we're Jon Boat sittin' with the line out
'Cause we're a little messed up, but it's cheaper than a dang old shrink
That's why we drink
'Cause we're grown up
'Cause we're still kids
'Cause we love doin' things 'cause our daddies did
'Cause it's alcohol abuse if you pour one down the sink
Yeah, that's why we drink
"History shows that people have always used intoxicants. In every age, in every part of the world, people have pursued intoxication with plants, alcohol, and other mind-altering substances. In fact, this behavior has so much force and persistence that it functions much like our drives for food, sleep, and sex. This 'fourth drive', says psycho-pharmacologist Ronald K. Siegel, is a natural part of our biology, creating an irrepressible demand for intoxicating substances."
Ronald K. Siegel answered the question back in the '80s in his book "Intoxication: The Universal Drive for Mind-Altering Substances". We drink because we are animals.
“A compleat suppression of every species of stimulating indulgence, if attainable at all, must be a work of peculiar difficulty, since it has to encounter not only the force of habit, but propensities in human nature. In every age & nation, some exhilarating or exciting substance seems to have been sought for, as a relief from the languor of idleness, or the fatigues of labor. In the rudest state of Society, whether in hot or cold climates, a passion for ardent spirits is in a manner universal. In the progress of refinement, beverages less intoxicating, but still of an exhilarating quality, have been more or less common. And where all these sources of excitement have been unknown or been totally prohibited by a religious faith, substitutes have been found in opium, in the nut of the betel, the root of the Ginseng, or the leaf of the Tobo. plant.” — James Madison
Water is the usual drink, but everyone has wine, for no civilization has found life tolerable without narcotics or stimulants. — Will Durant, Life of Greece (1939)
While I agree drinking alcohol is cultural, from my experience, success or failure from drinking, being an alcoholic, social drinker or teetotaler are highly individual outcomes, right down to families and siblings.