TrickJarrett.com

10/8/2024 8:25 am | : 5 mins. | Share to:

The real problem of humanity is the following: We have Paleolithic emotions, medieval institutions and godlike technology. And it is terrifically dangerous, and it is now approaching a point of crisis overall. - Edward O. Wilson

I was listening to The Weekly Show, the podcast hosted by Jon Stewart. He had Ezra Klein and Tristan Harris on, and during the conversation Harris dropped the above quote as a reference during the conversation. I really like that quote and I had to look it up to learn more about its origin.

It seems the origin of the quote comes from Wilson's book: The Origins of Creativity. I haven't read it yet, I'm going to add it to my towering to-be-read pile.

The Origins of Creativity by Edward O Wilson
The Origins of Creativity by Edward O Wilson
Bookshop | Amazon

I also came across this interview with Wilson on The Big Think. The video on the website is quite short, here is the transcript, the last paragraph which I've bolded is the main thesis of it:

When we address human creativity I think what we are dealing with right from the start is what makes us human, and there has been a great shortcoming in the humanities in explaining themselves in order to improve the creative powers of the humanities.

By that I mean most considerations of human behavior, its origin, and its meaning within the humanities, stops about the time of the origin of literacy when we can deal with symbols and with the first written languages and understand them. Or perhaps it goes back 10,000 years to the beginnings of Neolithic civilization.

But that's just an eye-blink of time in the origin of the emotions and the setup of the human brain that's permitted our understanding of the humanities and then ultimately science, to the bottoms of their depths.

And this then brings us to what I like to call—an acronym—PAPEN, P – A – P – E – N. And that is a designation of the areas of science that are most relevant to the humanities when they address the origins especially of the human species and the appearance of modern Homo sapiens some several hundred thousand years ago.

And PAPEN, P – A – P – E – N, stands for paleontology, anthropology, psychology, evolutionary biology and neural biology. These are the branches of science that need information on the origin of humans, and the deep history of pre-human existence is needed to explain the origins of creativity in modern human beings, and the ways and the reasons our emotions exist and rule us, leading to the way that I have tried to put it in saying that modern humanity is distinguished by paleolithic emotions and medieval institutions like banks and religions, and god-like technology. We're a mixed up and, in many ways, still archaic species in transition. We are what I like to call a chimera of evolution. We walk around and exist in this fairly newly made civilization that we created, a compound of different traits, of different origins and different degrees of forward evolution.