Agricultural Determinism: How Mode of Production Shapes Society

1622 Words4 Pages

Of all the natural variables in the development of culture in the New World, none have had so great an impact as those that determined the rise and spread of agriculture as the primary mode of food production. The adoption of agriculture allowed the earliest societies of North America to have surpluses of their most valuable resources. These surpluses allowed those within the community to be able to spend time on tasks unrelated to food production for the first time. This led to the development of many of mankind's foundational inventions, and gave way to the kind of occupation specialization that we see in society today. Without the incitation of agriculture, such conventional cultural concepts as writing, social hierarchy, and even warfare may have never come to fruition. For these reasons, it can be argued that the precursors that dictated the ascension of agriculture are amongst the most pivotal in the natural development of human history in the New World.
To understand how great an impact the development of agriculture had on the early evolution of the New World, we must first examine foraging societies to gauge what kinds of social developments were already in progress prior to the shift in mode of production. With the exception of “complex foragers”, who were fortunate enough to live in environments that could to sustain large populations without the need for regimented food production, hunter-gatherer bands simply did not have time for anything other than searching for their next few meals (Diamond). Without a surplus of food, they live much more similarly to the rest of the animal kingdom, focusing most of their efforts on sustenance, rather than things such as progression of technology and construction of monuments. Ins...

... middle of paper ...

....
The evolution of mode of production from foraging to agriculture is perhaps the single most consequential paradigm shift in human history. It sparked the development of some of mankind's most intrinsic inventions, created the food surpluses necessary for our exponential population expansion, and provided the stability necessary for the birth of culture. Without it, there would be no writing, irrigation, advanced methods of transportation, metal tools, electronics, internet, nor any true understanding of the cosmos. Instead, the world now operates as a global economic network of information systems, trade, and interaction. While the human population of Earth is by no means unified, it no longer exists in clumps of isolation, and the resulting connections allow for the type of cultural growth and evolution that would not have been possible in a world of foragers.

Open Document