
The Evolution of Domination: From Conquest to Cloaked Contracts
Drawing on David Graeber’s anthropological insights, language philosopher Bry Willis and Claude AI refute the "noble savage" myth by acknowledging that domination and hierarchy have always been part of the diverse spectrum of human political creativity. Rather than inventing subjugation, the Enlightenment and capitalism merely formalised and rationalised it, transitioning from the explicit, honest brutality of ancient conquest to a cloaked, structural system of contracts. Modernity’s unique innovation is its ability to mystify exploitation as voluntary exchange, persuading individuals that their own participation in a global hierarchy is a manifestation of freedom and natural law. Ultimately, the passage argues that while pre-modern rule was often violent, contemporary domination is more psychologically totalising because it encloses the imagination, making alternative ways of living seem unthinkable.
👉 https://philosophics.blog/2026/02/27/comrade-claude-9-david-graeber/
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