Collapse isn't coming, it's already scheduled | Eric Cline
Big Think Clips
0:00 I'm Eric Cline.
0:01 I'm an archaeologist and an ancient historian.
0:04 I'm also the author of 1177 BC, and it's sequel, After 1177 BC.
0:10 The period that we're discussing today is
0:14 incredibly important in the history of humankind.
0:17 It's the late Bronze Age, in particular,
0:20 which goes from about 1700 to 1200 BCE, or BC, if you prefer.
0:26 This was a time where people were basically globalized around
0:31 the Mediterranean in a way that is not frequently seen.
0:35 And so what happened to them back then may have implications for us today.
0:40 So it turns out to be a much
0:43 more important period to study than one might expect,
0:47 even though it's more than 3,000 years ago.
0:53 How to avoid civilizational collapse.
0:57 Even though I think we can rank these societies as to how well they each did,
1:03 one of the difficulties is to try to figure out why they did.
1:08 Like, why were the Cypriots and the Phoenicians able
1:11 to be that much more successful than the Hittites, for example?
1:17 So archaeologists and ancient historians are now starting to try
1:22 and answer these questions to grapple with the concepts.
1:26 And we're getting a couple of interesting things.
1:29 For example, it's now been suggested that maybe some
1:32 of the societies were more fragile than they appear,
1:35 and that they might have been more vulnerable
1:39 to the stresses than they appeared to outsiders.
1:43 Like the Mycenaeans, they had been over exploiting the lower classes.
1:48 And those lower classes might have been quite happy to see the palaces fall,
1:54 and even cheered, and they may have been part of the internal rebellions.
1:59 So it may be that something that looked very strong,
2:03 like the Hittites, was actually weakened internally,
2:06 and the first big gust of wind came and knocked that tree over,
2:11 and boom, no more Hittites.
2:13 But it also might have just been the luck of the draw.
2:18 It might have been geographical luck.
2:20 So I think that's where water comes into play,
2:24 because the Assyrians and the Babylonians are in my category,
2:29 too, and they're right by the Tigris and Euphrates.
2:34 And the Egyptians, of course, have the Nile.
2:38 Now, those are three of the big four in the ancient world.
2:43 I mean, my poor Mycenaeans and Minoans,
2:45 they're not quite up there with the others.
2:47 You know, the big two in the late Bronze Age are the Egyptians and the Hittites,
2:53 but then Assyrians and Babylonians.
2:56 So of those four Egyptians, Hittites, the Syrians,
3:00 Babylonians, Assyrians and Babylonians have the Tigris and Euphrates.
3:04 The Egyptians have the Nile.
3:06 The Hittites are the only one of those four without a major water source.
3:14 They're also the only one of those four that go down completely.
3:18 I don't think that's a coincidence.
3:21 And in fact, in talking to various people,
3:24 I've heard time and time again that wars over water
3:28 are going to be what are fought in the coming century.
3:32 And we can already see that in California with water,
3:36 with Colorado, with Mexico and all of that.
3:39 So I think in some ways, the fact that the Assyrians and the Babylonians
3:44 were able to maintain their government and their religion
3:48 and their writing systems and all of that might have been just luck of the draw,
3:54 that they were so far inland that the sea peoples
3:58 didn't get to them and they were on the two rivers, Tigris and Euphrates,
4:03 so that the drought didn't impact them as badly as it did others.
4:08 But having said that, we have written texts
4:12 from the Assyrians that do talk about period of drought.
4:17 They are Hitt.
4:18 It's not that long though.
4:20 It's like less than a century and it
4:23 came well after everyone else had been Hitt.
4:27 So there is something there to be said for where you happen to be.
4:33 So again, I think this is where we're going to be looking in the future,
4:39 is how did these people manage to survive or why didn't they survive?
4:44 Were they not aware that they were collapsing?
4:47 And again, we have to keep in mind
4:50 and actually say this at the beginning of the sequel.
4:54 Most of our records are from the 1%.
4:58 They're from the elite.
5:00 We know how the kings did and the central authorities that were living high.
5:07 We don't know as much about the 99% if you want to call them that, about
5:13 the farmers and the peasants out in the fields
5:17 in Messenia in Greece or the Hinterlands in Anatolia.
5:22 We don't really know their story that well,
5:25 but we're learning it because archaeologists are
5:27 now moving out and excavating the little villages,
5:31 the little towns that are inhabited across the divide, Bronze Age and Iron Age.
5:39 And so we're going to get more evidence.
5:42 We're going to get more answers.
5:44 And again, that's what I love about archaeology.
5:46 It's not cut and dried and if you will pardon the pun, it's not set in stone.
5:53 It changes depending on the new discoveries.
5:57 So everything you're reading in the books, not just my books,
6:01 but the history books and all that, it's going to be
6:04 different to a certain extent within five years, 10 years, 50 years.
6:09 I've already come out with the revised version of my first
6:13 book and I have a folder in Dropbox of new articles
6:18 that have already come out since 2021 that I need to take
6:23 into account if we're ever able to do a third edition.
6:28 It just keeps coming.
6:29 It doesn't stop.
6:31 And that is what is absolutely wonderful about it.
6:35 In addition to all the other factors, whether it was luck in the draw,
6:39 where you were situated or anything like that, the other
6:42 factor to bring into account is how good were your leaders?
6:46 That is, were they able to lead
6:49 you through this time of turbulence and catastrophe?
6:53 Did you have the right people in the right place at the right time or not?
7:00 I suspect that contributed a lot to this as well.
7:04 So for example, when Egypt had three or even four people all saying
7:09 that they were the Pharaoh at the same time in different parts of the country,
7:14 that's not good leadership.
7:16 That's not how you're going to get through this.
7:19 Similarly, the Hittite royal family had a schism
7:23 at exactly this time and parted the ways.
7:26 That was exactly the wrong time to do that.
7:30 You needed a strong leader in place at that time.
7:34 Now, the one or the two societies that do seem to have had the right
7:41 people at the right place at the right
7:44 time are the Assyrians and the Babylonians.
7:48 The Neo-Assyrian rulers and the Neo-Babylonian rulers seem to have
7:53 been the ones that got their societies through this.
7:58 In fact, a couple of fairly well-known scholars, a seriologist,
8:03 have said that that is why the Neo-Assyrians and the Neo-Babylonians
8:09 held on for about 100 years before everybody else,
8:14 before they were impacted to a certain extent by the collapse.
8:18 They said it was because they had strong rulers in place that they were
8:24 able to stave this off for a couple of decades or a century at most.
8:30 So I do think that leadership is incredibly important because
8:34 in part that leadership will determine how well you respond.
8:39 Having studied all of this, what happens in the aftermath and all of that, I was
8:45 again wondering what lessons could be learned
8:48 from the late Bronze Age collapse and the aftermath.
8:51 Was there anything that is of use to us today?
8:55 And I did come up with seven things that I
8:59 think are kind of common sense, if I may, that are things to remember,
9:04 things to live by, things that will help
9:07 us if we're ever going down that same path.
9:11 So I think the first one is pretty obvious,
9:14 that you need to have redundant systems in place.
9:18 We talk about that all the time today, but I think it's incredibly important.
9:23 You need to have a plan A, and if that somehow doesn't work, you need a plan B.
9:29 And if that doesn't work, you need a plan C.
9:32 It's kind of like having a generator in place in case your electricity goes out.
9:37 But I would say not just a plan A, B, and C, you need a D, E, and F as well.
9:45 You need multiple redundancies in place and plans that you
9:49 can go to if all of your major ones fail.
9:54 I think that is something that they needed to do back then,
9:59 and that we would still need to do today.
10:03 The next couple I would say are, again, common sense.
10:07 Be strong enough to resist invasion if you can.
10:11 Know who your friends are and who they aren't.
10:15 And also be resilient enough to go with the flow as you need to be.
10:21 Don't be rigid.
10:22 Don't be just, you know, no, this is how we've always done it.
10:27 But be prepared in case you're invaded.
10:29 Be prepared to reach out to allies.
10:32 And in that same tone, try and be as self-sufficient as you can,
10:38 but not to the detriment of alienating your allies,
10:41 I would say, because you're going to need each other.
10:45 So if you're going to make it through this crisis,
10:48 it's going to be because you're leaning on each other.
10:51 The other lesson that I think has a major takeaway from the Iron Age,
10:56 and I will deliberately call it the Iron Age rather than the Dark Age,
11:01 is to be innovative and inventive, right?
11:04 The fact that in the aftermath of the late Bronze Age,
11:09 they were innovative and inventive with iron and the alphabet,
11:13 I think is precisely what we would need to be again here today.
11:20 So we're talking in part, this is what evolutionary biologists and others would
11:26 talk about in terms of the adaptive cycle,
11:29 that when you have a crash in one area,
11:32 you then have an immediate era afterward where you are innovative and inventive.
11:38 It's basically the rise and fall of empires,
11:41 but here we've got a Mobius strip on its side, I would say.
11:46 And I think that's where this would come into place.
11:50 If you are crashing, if your society is coming down,
11:54 one of the ways you can best be
11:58 resilient is to be innovative, is to be inventive.
12:02 So back in the Iron Age,
12:04 what they did was turn to iron when they were having trouble making Bronze.
12:11 That actually, Tin Back Then has been compared to oil today, petroleum gasoline,
12:18 and their need for Tin Back Then is much like our oil today,
12:25 but I actually think it's changing now.
12:28 So just like in the Iron Age, they change to iron.
12:32 So what we need to be more worried about, I think, in this day and age,
12:39 are rare earths like lithium that are used in chips,
12:44 in computers, and cars, and microwaves, and everything else.
12:48 If something happens to the supply chain,
12:50 and we are not able to get that, I mean,
12:54 and remember what happened during the pandemic,
12:57 during COVID, which wasn't that long ago,
13:00 that we had such supply chain issues, and all of a sudden,
13:04 there was problems getting everything from computers to cars,
13:07 and we need to be innovative and inventive.
13:11 We need to be looking already for substitutes
13:14 that can take the place of lithium or whatever.
13:18 This needs to be not another dark age.
13:21 When we go down, if we go down,
13:24 and I actually think it's going to be when we go down,
13:27 we need to be prepared to turn on a dime
13:31 and be innovative and see what we come up with next.
13:35 If we're going to survive the collapse of our society,
13:38 which I do think is coming.
13:40 I don't know when, but I don't think it's, are we going to collapse?
13:45 I think it's when are we going to collapse?
13:47 And in this case, we're going to need to be innovative and inventive.
13:51 The other thing we need to do, and again,
13:54 I think this is very relevant to today,
13:58 is to prepare for extreme weather conditions.
14:01 Now back then in the late Bronze Age,
14:04 I was talking about a megadrought that lasted 150 to 300 years.
14:08 That, I believe, would qualify as an extreme weather event.
14:13 Today, we are also having extreme weather events.
14:16 We see it on almost on a daily basis now,
14:20 and what I would say here, my rule of thumb is,
14:24 look, prepare for extreme weather events, because then,
14:28 if they come, like intense hurricanes, then you're prepared.
14:32 And if they don't come, what have you lost?
14:36 Right?
14:36 Not much.
14:37 So I would say one of the big
14:40 lessons from antiquity is prepare for extreme weather conditions.
14:44 And along those same lines, I would say one of the other lessons
14:50 is to really be careful of your water resources.
14:54 Right?
14:54 Be very careful of where your water is going
14:57 to come from, whether it's from a river or elsewhere,
15:01 but we saw what happened in the late Bronze Age,
15:05 and we're seeing what's happening today,
15:08 where people are already fighting over water resources and especially rivers.
15:12 So I would say that that's another takeaway
15:15 from the late Bronze Age collapse and its aftermath.
15:20 And then the last thing that I would add is keep the working class happy.
15:27 I mean, any historian from any period
15:30 of history will tell you that that's essential.
15:34 Keep the working class happy, or there will be consequences to pay.
15:39 And I think we see this in the late Bronze Age collapse,
15:45 especially if internal rebellions are a greater
15:48 factor than we have thought even till today.
15:52 And even now, I would say we need to look around and ask,
15:57 you know, are we keeping the working class happy?
16:00 And if not, what's going to happen?
16:02 Right?
16:02 And if people point to all sorts
16:04 of things like the Russian Revolution and the French
16:07 Revolution and all of that, we've seen what
16:11 happens if the working class is not happy.
16:14 So I think that that is, again,
16:17 that would be my last of the common sense takeaways,
16:21 but surely we can add to it.
16:23 I mean, I think we could probably easily get up to a top 10,
16:27 but for right now, I've got a top seven.
16:30 One of the things we need to be worried about is the tipping point.
16:35 When are we going to reach the point of no return for ourselves?
16:40 Are there warning signs?
16:41 I do think there were warning signs back in the late Bronze Age.
16:45 We know that the Egyptians, for example,
16:47 were trying to cross-breed their cattle, their normal cattle with Zebu or Zebu
16:53 cattle who thrive better in arid conditions.
16:56 Is there anything we can do today if we notice
17:01 signs warning us that we may be approaching a societal collapse,
17:06 that there might be a tipping point coming up soon?
17:10 I think we've already got some of the signs out there.
17:14 Not everybody believes them, but I do think they are there.
17:17 I think the extreme climate, the weather conditions,
17:21 is one of the signs that we're approaching, possibly a tipping point.
17:26 But we've also got other things that some may or may not remember.
17:31 Back during the pandemic, when we had all sorts of supply
17:36 chain issues and had trouble getting toilet paper, that was a systemic problem.
17:42 I think kind of a warning of what might come.
17:47 The ship that got stuck in the Suez Canal for five or six days,
17:55 that I think was also a problem.
17:59 It really drove home the fact that one ship stuck
18:03 in one canal can affect people worldwide for a week or more.
18:09 Imagine if you had that at the same time as some of the other problems.
18:15 We might have been looking at a systems collapse very quickly.
18:20 And in fact, one of the things I am now wondering about,
18:25 back in 2008, we had the Wall Street financial crisis.
18:30 What if that crisis had happened 10 years later, or a dozen years later?
18:36 What if we had had the Wall Street financial problems
18:40 at the same time that COVID was hitting or beginning to hit?
18:44 What if they had both happened in about 2020?
18:48 I'm not so sure that we would be sitting here today.
18:53 I think we might be scrambling in the ruins of our globalized network.
18:59 I think we might have come this close to our tipping point,
19:04 and we're lucky that they were 10 or 12 years apart.
19:07 So I don't think we're out of the woods yet,
19:10 and I really do think that when people say to me, "Oh, we can't collapse.
19:17 We're too big to collapse.
19:19 We're too big to fail." And I answer it, "No, we're not.
19:25 That's hubristic.
19:26 Every society in the history
19:28 of humankind has either collapsed eventually, completely,
19:33 or has transformed so much that they're almost unrecognizable in their new form.
19:38 And to say that that's not going to happen to us,
19:43 I think is just foolish, hubristic for sure.
19:45 So when people say to me, "Are we going to collapse?" I look at them and I say,
19:51 "Yes, we are going to collapse.
19:53 The question is when are we going to collapse?"
19:55 And for that, I don't have an answer.
19:58 It could be next week.
19:59 It could be next year.
20:00 It could be 10 years from now.
20:02 It could be 50 years from now.
20:03 But I am sure that at some point we are going to collapse or have to transform.
20:08 I mean, maybe AI is going to create it and cause it right now.
20:12 But who knows?
20:13 My big question to those that are asking
20:16 me is to ask them back when we collapse, how are we going to deal with it?
20:23 Are we going to be fragile?
20:25 Are we going to be vulnerable?
20:28 Are we going to be anti-fragile?
20:30 In the aftermath of our society collapse, are we going to be Phoenicians?
20:35 Or are we going to be my cenaeans?
20:39 And I personally am a bit worried.
20:42 As an archaeologist, I look back.
20:45 I tell my students that they are the next generation and they
20:49 are going to be inheriting all of the problems we have created.
20:53 We know that.
20:55 I am not saying anything new.
20:57 But this is where archaeology, I think, can be of use.
21:02 And especially archaeology when it is applied to ancient history.
21:06 Because if we are willing to listen and to learn from the past,
21:12 then we can deal with what is happening in the present.
21:16 And that will affect our future.
21:19 Otherwise, we are just doomed to repeat the past again and again and again.
21:26 And personally, I think we are smarter than that.
21:32 But I may be wrong.
21:35 Let's hope I am right.
21:38 Want to support the channel?
21:40 Join the Big Think members community where you get access to videos early?
21:44 Add free.