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Home » What Ancient Civilizations Teach Us About Reality: Greg Anderson (Transcript)

What Ancient Civilizations Teach Us About Reality: Greg Anderson (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Greg Anderson’s talk titled “What Ancient Civilizations Teach Us About Reality” at TEDxOhioStateUniversity conference.

In this TEDx talk, Greg Anderson, a historian, challenges modern perceptions of reality by proposing that ancient civilizations experienced reality differently than we do today. He suggests that, unlike our current understanding, which is dominated by materialism and individualism, ancient societies lived in a pluriverse of many real worlds, each with its own unique constructs. Anderson uses the ancient Greeks as a case study, showing how their world was intertwined with gods, spirits, and communal living, starkly contrasting with modern Western individualism.

He argues that the concept of a single, objective reality is a modern construct, shaped by the scientific revolution and capitalism in early modern Europe. Anderson criticizes the modern tendency to dismiss ancient realities as less enlightened, pointing out that these civilizations sustained complex societies for centuries. He highlights the arrogance of assuming our reality is the only true one and calls for a reevaluation of other possible models of reality.

Anderson concludes by urging modern Westerners to learn from the sustainable and communal ways of life of ancient and indigenous peoples, to imagine and realize alternative ways of being in the world.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Rethinking Reality

In the next few minutes, I hope to change the way you think about the very nature of reality itself. I’m not a physicist, and I’m not a philosopher. I’m a historian. And after studying the ancient Greeks and many other premodern peoples for more than 20 years as a professional, I’ve become convinced that they all lived in real worlds very different from our own.

Now of course, you and I here today, we take it for granted that there’s just one ultimate reality out there – our reality, a fixed universal world of experience ruled by timeless laws of science and nature. I want you to see that humans have always lived in a pluriverse of many different worlds, not in a universe of just one. And if you’re willing to see this pluriverse of many worlds, it will fundamentally change, I hope, the way you think about the human past and, hopefully, the present and the future as well.

The Nature of Our Reality

Now let’s get started by asking three basic questions about the contents of our reality, the real world that you and I share right here, right now. First of all, what is it that makes something real in our real world?

Well, for us, real things are material things, things made of matter that we can somehow see, like atoms, people, trees, mountains, planets; by the same token, invisible, immaterial things, like gods and demons, heavens and hells, are considered unreal. They’re simply beliefs, subjective ideas that exist only in the realm of the mind. To be real, a thing must exist objectively in some visible, material form, whether our minds can perceive it or not.

Second, what are the most important things in our real world? Answer? Human things – people, cities, societies, cultures, governments, economies. Why is this? Well, because we humans think we’re special. We think we’re the only creatures on the planet who have things like language, reason, free will.

By contrast, non-human things to us are just parts of nature, a mere backdrop to human culture, a mere environment of things that we feel entitled to use however we want. And third, what does it mean to be a human in our real world? Well, it means being an individual, a person who lives ultimately for oneself. We think nature has made us this way, giving each and every one of us all of the reason, the right, the freedom, and the self-interest to thrive and compete with other individuals for all of life’s important resources.

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A Glimpse into Another Reality

But I’m suggesting to you that this real world of ours is neither timeless nor universal; it’s just one of countless different real worlds that humans have experienced in history. What, then, would another world look like?

Well, let’s look at one: the real world of the classical Athenians in ancient Greece. Now, of course, we usually know the Athenians as our cultural ancestors, pioneers of our Western traditions – philosophy, democracy, drama, and so forth – but their real world was nothing like our own.

The real world of the Athenians was alive with things that we would consider immaterial and thus unreal. It pulsated with things like gods, spirits, nymphs, fates, curses, oaths, souls, and all kinds of mysterious energies and magical forces. Indeed, the most important things in their real world were not humans at all but gods. Why? Because gods were awesome, literally. They controlled all the things that made life possible: sunshine, rainfall, crop harvests, childbirth, personal health, family wealth, sea voyages, battlefield victories.

There were over 200 gods in Athens, and they were not remote, detached divinities watching over human affairs from afar. They were really there, immediately there in experience, living in temples, attending sacrifices, mingling with the Athenians at their festivals, banquets, and dances. And in the real world of the Athenians, humans did not live apart from nature. Their lives were dictated by the rhythms of the seasons and by the life cycles of crops and animals.

Indeed, the land of the Athenians itself was not just a piece of property or territory; it was a goddess, a living goddess that had once given birth to the first Athenians and had nurtured and cared for all of their descendants ever since with her precious gifts of soils, water, stone, and crops.

Indeed, if anything should pollute her soils with unlawful bloodshed, it had to be expelled immediately beyond her boundaries, whether it was a man, an animal, or just a fallen roof tile. And in the real world of the Athenians, there were no individuals. All Athenians were inseparable from their families, and all Athenian families were expected to live together and work together as a single body, like cells of a living organism.

The Athenian Social Body

They called this social body simply ‘dimas’, the people, and they called their way of life ‘democratia’, but it was nothing like our modern democracy, because Athenians were not born to be individuals living for themselves.