Longreads + Open Thread

EA, ChatGPT, Smuggling, Borders, Automaticity, Bottlenecks, India

Longreads

Books

The Golden Road: How Ancient India Transformed the World: One of the thoughts I had while reading this book was that kids who grow up in India presumably get a history education that's roughly as India-centric as US history education is US-centric. A big part of reading history is understanding your place in it, so that obviously makes sense. But, when they start reading about European history, does it feel a little bit like a rerun of phenomena they've already seen, just set in an exotic location? Combine human nature and geographic constraints, and you can see the same pattern show up again and again. Some countries find a niche where they're centrally located and have access to the sea, so they do a fair amount of trading, which leads to enough economic surplus to allow activities like theology, philosophy, and math to flourish, and they also function as a switchboard carrying new ideas around to their neighbors. That's part of what ancient Greece did, and then the Northern Italian city-states, later the Dutch, then the English, and now, still, the United States. There is a great deal of operating leverage in a nation: a small relative advantage can mean a massive absolute contribution.

One important thing this book added to my model of world history is that India had closer ties to the West before the rise of Islam, and those ties only gradually frayed. (And, thanks to the subcontinent's strategic position, they could amortize at least some of the fixed assets involved by shifting trade east.) The story that the apostle Thomas who personally knew Jesus, visiting India would have been more plausible to his contemporaries than to Christians a millennium later, and one of the ways we trace these fraying trade ties is the eventual absence of some jewels that were more common in early medieval crowns. So India has the odd distinction of entering western awareness as a place one might plausibly visit, then turning into a semi-mythical land that someone like Christopher Columbus could use to rope uninformed high-net-worth investors into an otherwise clearly infeasible startup.

Two of the other historical patterns that show up in European history as an echo of something from India’s history: Buddhism started in India, but the largest population is outside of it; as in Europe and the surrounding areas, where faiths spread and persist is not always connected to where they started. And this was partly a function of politics—Wu Zetian used Buddhism to help legitimize her rule, and the Tang used suppressing Buddhism to legitimize theirs once she was deposed. 

One good reason to read this book is that if you look at the global distribution of English speakers, and think about how quickly different populations went online, you could see the English-speaking Internet as a whole starting as an American-by-default context, and evolving into something more global, with India as the second-biggest English-speaking population. (This is one contributor to the otherwise weird recent rise in anti-Indian racism online—India is getting a lot more salient, and the median Internet user is a lot more likely to care about Indian domestic issues and pop culture than was historically the case.) And the number of people who speak something as a second language is a lot more elastic than the number who speak it as their native language. So, over the course of your lifetime, you should expect that knowing more Indian history will be a bigger part of being an adult, in the same way that you’d expect a typical American adult to know roughly who Demosthenes was. The Golden Road is a great start.

Open Thread

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