The Origins and Dynamics of Inequality: Sex, Politics, and Ideology
Autor Jon D. Wismanen Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 oct 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197575949
ISBN-10: 0197575943
Pagini: 520
Dimensiuni: 238 x 165 x 42 mm
Greutate: 0.87 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197575943
Pagini: 520
Dimensiuni: 238 x 165 x 42 mm
Greutate: 0.87 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
The Origins and Dynamics of Inequality is an important book. Wisman's analysis of the forces that shaped inequality in different periods is insightful. Extreme material inequality in human society has existed for over 5,000 years. It is still egregious in present day economically developed and democratic societies. The better we understand it, the more hope there is of mitigating it.
If we want more than just a more equitable distribution of resources, if we want sustainable prosperity for the world, we ignore [this] important and readable [book] at our peril.
...the arguments are excitingly new and largely persuasive. The book is also a terrific read. It builds the inequality narrative on a deep human impulse, foregrounds culture, and unlike stories that place excessive weight on industrial capitalism, builds a story that acknowledges many transitions and suggests a way to relate these.
In sum, our biology condemns the human race to be competitive and acquisitive and only with concerted effort to build institutions that can fine tune the impact of its innate nature could it succeed in containing rent-seeking and creating a more "egalitarian future". These interdisciplinary arguments are presented in great detail with many innovative ideas. This large- vision book deserves to be read by anyone interested in the nature and rise of inequality; in other words, it should be on all of our bookshelves in easy reach.
The Origins and Dynamics of Inequality tackles the two problems head-on, with a rich analytical narrative that needs 500-odd pages to build a connected history. Two ideas hold this project together. First, inequality stems from an impulse to corner the good things in life. The deepest and oldest impulse is biological, to win the competition for sexual partners and be successful in the evolutionary game. This, the biological root, is largely forgotten because we get carried away by the forms that power takes...The biological root of inequality, and the elite conversion of economic power into political power by cultural-ideological means, run through the book as two connecting threads.
If we are looking for worldwide sustainable prosperity and a fair distribution of resources, thus lessening inequality, reading Wisman's book becomes compulsory.
Wisman shows inequality to be the cause of much social, economic, political and environmental harm for at least fifty-five centuries. He also shows that in each historical era of inequality, the winners in the competition for the highest ranks have used ideology and religion to claim falsely that the exploitation that made them winners and the rest losers, was really in the interest of the losers, too. Professor Wisman has done a good job shining his light on dark corners of inequality.
Jon Wisman's entire scholarly life has a consistent and persistent focus on inequality including its causes, its consequences, and possible remedies. This scholarly life is powerfully presented to us in his new book, The Origins and Dynamics of Inequality: Sex, Politics, and Ideology. Wisman's book can only be described accurately as a Magnum Opus; it is the culmination of his scholarly work to date.
The book is absorbing and a lesson in how to combine data, evidence, quotes, anecdotes, and narrative. It is now a touchstone for me.
[A] classic in the making... Wisman is a rare example of someone who has transcended his discipline. Chapter by chapter - and mostly using the long arc of human history to provide a storyline - he guides the reader in their development of understanding about how inequality instantiated itself into consequential areas of civilisation (and pre-civilisation)... an undiscovered masterpiece.
Wisman welcomes the explosion of interest in inequality we have seen so far in the twenty-first century...In the pages of The Origins and Dynamics of Inequality, he sets out to do that shining. More specifically, he sets out to demonstrate the centrality of inequality to human history and the centrality of politics to that inequality.
Wisman's masterfully-crafted manuscript centers on the idea that the force that has shaped human history is the struggle over inequality... This book's potent arguments will not leave the reader indifferent and, thus, deserve to be read and debated widely.
The writing is dignified, assured, magisterial, and eminently accessible to a generalist reader. Wisman shows how pushing for less inequality is like pushing against gravity-- pushing against gene-driven competition to acquire positions of higher status. The problem is not with this competition, but with how institutions channel its expression... The overall value of the book is that it offers a re-interpretation of human history where the struggle over inequality is the driving force. It provides a novel explanation of why inequality exists, how it has been expressed through history, and what must be understood to create a fairer, more humane future.
If we want more than just a more equitable distribution of resources, if we want sustainable prosperity for the world, we ignore [this] important and readable [book] at our peril.
...the arguments are excitingly new and largely persuasive. The book is also a terrific read. It builds the inequality narrative on a deep human impulse, foregrounds culture, and unlike stories that place excessive weight on industrial capitalism, builds a story that acknowledges many transitions and suggests a way to relate these.
In sum, our biology condemns the human race to be competitive and acquisitive and only with concerted effort to build institutions that can fine tune the impact of its innate nature could it succeed in containing rent-seeking and creating a more "egalitarian future". These interdisciplinary arguments are presented in great detail with many innovative ideas. This large- vision book deserves to be read by anyone interested in the nature and rise of inequality; in other words, it should be on all of our bookshelves in easy reach.
The Origins and Dynamics of Inequality tackles the two problems head-on, with a rich analytical narrative that needs 500-odd pages to build a connected history. Two ideas hold this project together. First, inequality stems from an impulse to corner the good things in life. The deepest and oldest impulse is biological, to win the competition for sexual partners and be successful in the evolutionary game. This, the biological root, is largely forgotten because we get carried away by the forms that power takes...The biological root of inequality, and the elite conversion of economic power into political power by cultural-ideological means, run through the book as two connecting threads.
If we are looking for worldwide sustainable prosperity and a fair distribution of resources, thus lessening inequality, reading Wisman's book becomes compulsory.
Wisman shows inequality to be the cause of much social, economic, political and environmental harm for at least fifty-five centuries. He also shows that in each historical era of inequality, the winners in the competition for the highest ranks have used ideology and religion to claim falsely that the exploitation that made them winners and the rest losers, was really in the interest of the losers, too. Professor Wisman has done a good job shining his light on dark corners of inequality.
Jon Wisman's entire scholarly life has a consistent and persistent focus on inequality including its causes, its consequences, and possible remedies. This scholarly life is powerfully presented to us in his new book, The Origins and Dynamics of Inequality: Sex, Politics, and Ideology. Wisman's book can only be described accurately as a Magnum Opus; it is the culmination of his scholarly work to date.
The book is absorbing and a lesson in how to combine data, evidence, quotes, anecdotes, and narrative. It is now a touchstone for me.
[A] classic in the making... Wisman is a rare example of someone who has transcended his discipline. Chapter by chapter - and mostly using the long arc of human history to provide a storyline - he guides the reader in their development of understanding about how inequality instantiated itself into consequential areas of civilisation (and pre-civilisation)... an undiscovered masterpiece.
Wisman welcomes the explosion of interest in inequality we have seen so far in the twenty-first century...In the pages of The Origins and Dynamics of Inequality, he sets out to do that shining. More specifically, he sets out to demonstrate the centrality of inequality to human history and the centrality of politics to that inequality.
Wisman's masterfully-crafted manuscript centers on the idea that the force that has shaped human history is the struggle over inequality... This book's potent arguments will not leave the reader indifferent and, thus, deserve to be read and debated widely.
The writing is dignified, assured, magisterial, and eminently accessible to a generalist reader. Wisman shows how pushing for less inequality is like pushing against gravity-- pushing against gene-driven competition to acquire positions of higher status. The problem is not with this competition, but with how institutions channel its expression... The overall value of the book is that it offers a re-interpretation of human history where the struggle over inequality is the driving force. It provides a novel explanation of why inequality exists, how it has been expressed through history, and what must be understood to create a fairer, more humane future.
Notă biografică
Jon D. Wisman is Professor of Economics at American University in Washington, D.C. He served as President of the Association for Social Economics in 2002 and has twice been selected by American University as the Outstanding Teacher of the Year. He was also a recipient of the 2023 Veblen-Commons Award, in recognition of his significant contributions to the evolutionary institutional economics.