The Case for Drinking
Alcohol facilitates human cooperation and creativity on a grand scale, says Edward Slingerland, a philosophy professor at the University of British Columbia.
HD Download"We've been looking at alcohol consumption through this very distorted lens," says Edward Slingerland, author of Drunk: How We Sipped, Danced, and Stumbled Our Way to Civilization. "We've only been looking at it as a kind of addictive pleasure substance. We haven't been seeing any of the positive social benefits."
While not minimizing the dangers of overuse, Slingerland lays out a case that alcohol is a cultural technology that motivated humans to create and maintain civilization.
"[Alcohol] helps us to be more creative. It helps us to be more communal. It helps us to cooperate on a large scale. It helps to make it easier for us to kind of rub shoulders with each other in large-scale societies that we live in. So it solved a bunch of adaptive problems that we uniquely face as a species because of this weird lifestyle we have."
Alcohol's effect on the brain's prefrontal cortex (PFC), Slingerland argues, allows us to be more receptive and creative.
"One of the functions of alcohol is to reach in and basically turn down our prefrontal cortex a few notches, temporarily taking us back to being like a four-year-old in terms of our cognitive flexibility but with all the knowledge and the goals and the affordances of being an adult. And it's temporary," says Slingerland.
"A few hours later, we're back to being adults again. So depressing the PFC increases…allows parts of our brain to talk in ways that normally they don't."
Suppressing the prefrontal cortex also makes it more difficult to lie.
"In every culture I know, whenever you get potentially hostile strangers or people with potentially competing interests who have to come to an agreement and figure something out, alcohol's involved. And in places that don't have alcohol, they use some other substance that has exactly the same function. The same way we shake hands when we need to show we're not carrying a weapon, if I sit down and drink a few beers with you, I'm basically taking my PFC out and putting it on the table and saying, 'you know, I'm cognitively disarmed.'"
"We have to learn to trust, even though it's not rational to trust," he says. "And alcohol's a tool for helping us to do that, not only by disarming our ability to lie and deceive other people, but it's also boosting serotonin and endorphins. It's making us feel good about each other. It's bonding us."
Produced and edited by Meredith Bragg. Motion graphics by Bragg and Lex Villena.
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Sorta like, Hey, it's been a long week, work mode is over, I need to switch to relax mode.
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Civilization itself exists because of alcohol. Beer requires grain which requires farming to ensure adequate supply which led to cities and thus civilization.
Some dispute this saying cities and bread came first, but all three happened at basically the same time. I choose to believe the beer came very shortly after the bread and it was the major impetus for stable settlements.
I figure what it really took was local overpopulation. The foragers and hunters learn where the good spots are, like water holes, and tend to visit those places more often. Think of the two major Middle East river valley civilizations which developed writing -- the Tigris/Euphrates and the Nile -- surrounded by desert which constricted the populations, they either cooperated or died in warfare. Thus the local overpopulation. Thus agriculture and cities and fermentation and armies and thugs-in-chief and rulers and governments and warfare.
One does not "forage" for barley. Millet is different, but early beer was not millet. Collecting enough wild barley for either beer or bread is a major pain. Thus there must have been spots where it occured naturally in abundance. Hence the deltas of the Tigris and Euphrates. And leave the break out overnight in a barrel and it rains, bam you got "hey this bread water makes me tipsy" juice. A lot of early beer was based on barley cakes of a sort. So bread came first.
But the cities (as in cities, not just riverside villages) is because of the beer. That's my thesis and I'm sticking to it.
The earliest archaeological sites were built as party spots:
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2018/sep/01/social-drinking-moderation-health-risks
Archaeologists made an intriguing discovery recently at the neolithic site of Göbekli Tepe in southern Turkey. They uncovered a series of giant stone troughs erected more than 10,000 years ago. And at the bottom of these huge vessels, they found traces of a chemical called calcium oxalate, typically produced during the soaking, mashing and fermenting of grain. It’s a by-product of brewing, in other words. 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.
I'm not convinced anyone knows what Gobekli Tepe was really for. There's a ton of stuff yet to be fully excavated and documented. I'm going to guess that it was more than a party/ceremonial gathering site.
The Case for Drinking
$5 gas, 9% inflation, supply chain problems...
Too many of the writers at Reason... 🙂
The Case for Drinking?
Dealing with the government.
I do appreciate the author's points. Maybe we can get government bureaucrats to drink on the job. That way they're either drinking, or passed out drunk - an improvement over them initiating force against people who don't initiate force against others while sober.
"We haven't been seeing any of the positive social benefits."
Like drunk driving.
Beating up random people.
Suicide.
Depression.
Addiction.
The toppling of entire countries.
Is prohibition right around the corner? I mean for god-damned sake reason, is it really necessary to equate libertarianism with libertinism?
I hardly think that alcohol use constitutes libertinism. It's pretty central to a lot of human culture and religion and has been for millennia.
to alcohol! the cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems.
I believe you exaggerate both cause and solution contribution.
And you don't watch the Simpsons enough.
Didn't. Past tense. Because it really doesn't have cultural relevance anymore.
I last tried to watch some Simpsons a couple years ago and it was woke it's unwatchable. Politics aside, it was like they forgot it was supposed to be a comedy. And I didn't mind the weird, stupid, hit and miss attempts they did in the early-mid teens. The last few I tried to watch were miss and miss, I gave up.
Woke Simpsons is the worse Simpsons.
also evident they are now animated by Disney (or ala Disney) which bugs my eyes
'93 --> '03 were consistent diamonds.
I don't think I've seen a new Simpsons for at least 10 years. I really thought they were almost done 20 years ago. So when I say "Simpsons" I'm pretty much referring to 90s Simpsons. I must be getting old because now I just think everything reached its peak in the 90s.
A band I like is on tour for a new album, and I don't have a hardon to go see them. I like the band, but they're getting all political and shit. Hey assholes, you're entertainers not oracles. Fuck off. I'll go to the concert anyway.
I miss the days when culturally relevant shows threw out lines like "Nothing like a depressant to pick you up when you're felling blue."
I don't think it's just the Simpsons. Woke has ruined so much entertainment I pretty much don't bother with television/streaming anymore. Haven't been to the movies in way longer, but I don't watch them at home anymore, either. Creative monocultures forced to conform are just awful.
Homer Simpson is a wise man.
I think Marge actually said that.
I'll becha a box of ammo it was him.
Last time I went to Kittery Trading Post I got a box of 150 5.56 for $100.
Shooting is an expensive hobby.
is Homer ... last line of "Homer v. 18th Amendment" the one where they try prohibition & Homer is the Beer Baron
https://twitter.com/henryrodgersdc/status/1542501961718796288?t=0tS60gWTtoL9scWbGAY-7w&s=19
Well Biden does not think people should be arrested for drunk driving…
[Video]
That lady's jaw literally dropped after he said that lol
Kind of odd, given that for years he was lying about the death of his first wife, falsely claiming that she was killed by a drunk driver, in an attempt to garner sympathy.
Oh, these clips are going to be gold when he is running for reelection.
What are the odds they'll let him run for another term? In your opinion, I mean.
Personally, I'm not sure the odds, but I definitely believe it won't be guaranteed.
He can't. It will destroy the democratic party
Think he was drunk when he said that?
Ancient archaeological evidence shows Ireland was a much different place before the invention of alcohol.
Alcohol, it's what makes people tolerable to each other.
I'd wager during periods when we had bipartisan cooperation and lots of congress critters reaching across the aisle it was to pass the bottle around. Or blow, it definitely could have been blow.
Aw phuck yoo. Some peeps are insufferbel shits no matter how much you injest.
Someone made a movie about how beer created the world or something.
Young Einstein?
Saved!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcLasNk4i-c
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIsOr8TlXmU
Farming? Beer. Germ theory? Beer. Human culture? Beer.
Beer.
This is not scientific, but after a couple of beers, I feel warm and fuzzy.
How many of us here wouldn't exist without slippery irresponsible drunken sex? I know I wouldn't.
No, thanks. Stopped drinking many years ago. Alcohol has wreaked a great deal of havoc on my family and friends.
The third Canadian to tell us this since Bob and Doug.
As usual with Ivory Tower elites and amateurs the Professor gets it half right. As the owner of a bar for 20+ years, I feel overqualified to make an assessment. Alcohol has a wide range of varying affects on people. Some get friendly and chatty, like those he's posited. Others get withdrawn and introspective. Some get belligerent and obnoxious. Then there are the ones that get angry and violent. Over the years I have not been able to determine in advance any predictive characteristics for each class of behaviors, other than knowing what to look out for in one of my regular drinkers. So, putting people with differing views together with alcohol doesn't always end with a peaceful outcome. Heck, I've seen fights start between people who are fans of the same team but who have slightly different assessments of their strengths and skill levels.