Longreads + Open Thread

Palantir, Volatility, Aphantasia, Sundheim, Consumerism, Information, Quants, McCarthy

Longreads

Books

Blood Meridian: Or the Evening Redness in the West: The "frontier thesis" of American history focuses on how Westward expansion had mostly positive cultural effects on the people who did it. But another effect of the frontier is that it gives your society somewhere to put the most dangerous and dysfunctional ones.

Blood Meridian is a novel, not a history book, but it draws heavily from a nonfiction work, Samuel Chamberlain's My Confession, detailing Chamberlain's late-1840s/early-1850s membership in the Glanton Gang, a group of scalpers. They were hired by local governments to scalp Apaches, and were paid per scalp. But the most successful gangs tended to scalp whoever they could get away with, terrorizing random villages and travelers until the government caught up with them. (What a relief it must have been for residents of East Coast cities to know that the invisible hand had carefully picked up everyone who would be willing to scalp an innocent person for money and distributed them near the Texas/Mexico border.)

The way I read the book was that it's a meditation on the fact that civilization tends to tamp down people's naturally violent nature, but it consists entirely of those same flawed, violence-prone people. The agents of the state who enforce norms of nonviolence are presumably going to include more than their fair share of people who actually enjoy violence, if only because their job provides a socially-sanctioned outlet for it. A gang of scalpers is taking that to an extreme, but it's a natural feature of any civilization. And yet, it actually works—the bad characters in the story tend to come to unfortunate ends, with the exception of the implied-to-be-supernatural Judge Holden. (Holden is portrayed as never changing over time, capable of great depravity, but also someone who everyone in the Glanton gang encountered somewhere else before they joined up with him. Fictional portrayals of satan tend towards camp, but this one works.)

Cormac McCarthy tends to write bleak novels whose payoff is more bleakness, but they're also very frank. That kind of behavior is something people are capable of, and we don't need all that much encouragement. And that ends up being pretty optimistic, because it's hard to dispute what McCarthy says about the worst of human behavior, but also hard to dispute that most of the time, we manage to contain that behavior and largely get along.

Open Thread

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