新异教徒的思考 / 金属时代
让我们想象一下,几千年前走在一个新石器时代的村庄中,周围是集体耕作的田地和由群体照顾的家畜。人们并不为积累而挣扎,因为这个概念对他们来说是陌生的;人们共同劳动,分享食物和资源,经济差异微乎其微,几个人可能有几只羊,但这并不会造成等级制度或世袭特权;生活以平等的方式组织,因为生存本身依赖于合作,这是一种运作良好的无政府状态,是一种尊重自然循环的社会生态平衡。
然而,某种东西开始破裂;随着金属时代的到来,铜、青铜,最终是铁,社会经历了深刻的变革,伴随着这种变革,像毒药流入河流一样,真正的社会不平等开始出现;人们不禁要问,为什么是金属?答案不在于材料本身,而在于它们所需的制造过程。
提取矿石、冶炼和锻造并不是普通的工作;这并不是人人都能做的,它需要特殊的知识,这些知识可以被保守,并且首次被商品化。现在,有人控制着斧头、剑和犁的生产,这种控制带来了特权;曾经是社区一员的金属工匠,开始转变为权力的节点。
人们不禁要问,是工匠要求更高的工资,还是普通人自发地承认了他们的价值。历史学家给出的答案是第二种选择,这显然是源于资本主义心态的虚伪选择。就我个人而言,我拒绝自发交换的理论。在我看来,实际上是逐渐的敲诈和勒索:“没有我的犁,你的田地就荒芜;没有我的斧头,你砍木头时会更加艰难,所以给我钱。”
但并不仅仅是铁匠在吸血;部落首领,曾因其社会责任和智慧在同伴中脱颖而出,开始通过向铁匠或向社区出售金属工具的中间商征收贸易税来获取利益,从而在不锻造任何工具的情况下使自己富裕。甚至连祭司也发生了变化,从守护内在神圣的角色变成了商品化神圣的推销员;他们开始出售祝福,让人们相信没有他们的仪式,斧头就无法砍伐,或者没有他们的祈祷,田地就不会结果。他们开始创造天堂,以此来为自己在世上的角色辩护,为随之而来的所有制度化宗教奠定基础。
这种腐败的证据就在我们眼前。只需比较一下新石器时代的墓葬,所有人的墓碑都很简单,而青铜时代的墓葬中,在一片无名墓碑的海洋中,只有极少数的墓葬中有珠宝和珍贵饰品等贵重物品。这是一个社会分化为阶级的第一张可怕快照:富人和穷人,强者和弱者。
随着不平等的加剧,人与人之间的系统性剥削开始出现,大多数人的劳动不再服务于社区,而是服务于少数人的特权。这种诅咒般的动态并没有随着金属时代的结束而停止,它延续到了现代社会,伴随着巨大的不平等、亿万富翁和绝望的人们。我们的社会是那个在金属时代冶炼炉中诞生的金字塔系统的直接继承者。这不是进步;这是降临在平等梦想上的漫长黑暗之夜,而我们至今仍在为此付出代价。
查看原文
Let us imagine walking through a Neolithic village thousands of years ago, surrounded by collectively cultivated fields and domestic animals cared for by the group. There is no struggle for accumulation because this concept is foreign; people work together, share food and resources, economic differences are so subtle as to be almost non-existent, someone may have a few more sheep, but this does not create castes or hereditary privileges; life is organized in an egalitarian way because survival itself depends on cooperation, it is a functioning anarchy, a social eco-balance that honors the cycles of nature.
Then something cracks; with the advent of the metal ages, copper, bronze, and finally iron, societies undergo a profound mutation and with this mutation, like poison flowing in a river, the first real social inequalities arise; one wonders why metals? The answer lies not in the material itself, but in the manufacturing process they require.
Extracting minerals, smelting, and forging is not a job like any other; it is not accessible to everyone, it requires special knowledge, knowledge that can be guarded and, for the first time, commodified. Now there are people who control the production of axes, swords, and plows, and this control gives rise to privilege; the metalworker, once a member of the community, begins to transform into a node of power.
One wonders whether it was the craftsmen who demanded higher wages or whether the common people spontaneously recognized their value. The answer given by historians is the second option, which is clearly a hypocritical choice derived from a capitalist mentality. Personally, I reject the theory of spontaneous exchange. In my opinion, there was creeping extortion, blackmail: “Without my plow, your field is barren; without my axes, you will struggle much more when you have to cut wood, so pay me.”
But it wasn't just the blacksmiths who were parasites; the tribal chiefs, once foremost among their peers for their social commitment and wisdom, began to tax trade by demanding a toll on sales from blacksmiths or middlemen who sold metal tools to their communities, thus enriching themselves without forging any tools. even the priests were transformed, from guardians of an immanent sacredness to peddlers of a commodified sacredness; they began to sell blessings, to make people believe that an axe without their ritual would not cut or that a field without their prayer would not bear fruit. They began to create heaven to justify their role on earth, laying the foundations for all the institutionalized religions that would follow.
The evidence of this corruption is right before our eyes. Just compare a Neolithic tomb with modest graves that are the same for everyone with a Bronze Age tomb where, among a sea of anonymous graves, there are very few tombs containing objects of great value such as jewelry and precious ornaments. It is the first macabre snapshot of a society divided into classes: the rich and the poor, the powerful and the subordinates.
With the increase in inequality came the systematic exploitation of man by man, and the work of the majority began to serve not the community but the privilege of the few. this cursed dynamic did not stop with the Metal Age, it continued into modern societies, with their colossal inequalities, their billionaires and their desperate people. Our societies are the direct heirs of that pyramidal system born in the smelting furnaces of the Metal Ages. This is not progress; it is the long, dark night that has fallen on a dream of equality, and we are still paying the price today.