D&D - Mediaval Social, Political & Economical Structure.

Egyptian mummies have been found containing South American cocaine AIR

Looking that one up: one researcher (a German toxicologist - Svetlana Balabanova) reported finding traces of nicotine and coca in one Egyptian, and several Sudanese mummies. Those findings have not been confirmed by other researchers.

Lack of corroboration from other researchers leads me to be skeptical on that one.
 

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Looking that one up: one researcher (a German toxicologist - Svetlana Balabanova) reported finding traces of nicotine and coca in one Egyptian, and several Sudanese mummies. Those findings have not been confirmed by other researchers.

Lack of corroboration from other researchers leads me to be skeptical on that one.

Mystery of the Cocaine Mummies - transcript of the video

The Straight Dope: What's up with the "cocaine mummies"?

American Drugs in Egyptian Mummies

“Since the initial work of Balabanova et. al., other studies have revealed the same drugs (cocaine, nicotine, and hashish) in Egyptian mummies, confirming the original results. Nerlich et. al. (1995), in a study evaluating the tissue pathology of an Egyptian mummy dating from approximately 950 B.C., found the compounds in several of the mummy's organs. They found the highest amounts of nicotine and cocaine in the mummy's stomach, and the hashish traces primarily in the lungs. These findings were again identified using both radio immunoassay and GSMS techniques. Very similar results were again found in yet another study by Parsche and Nerlich (1995). Again, the findings were obtained using the immunological and chromatographic techniques. “​

(This last is from the last link, from Colorodo State University, and is the most interesting to read, because it answers specific criticisms.)

Even in the intitial study

Of the nine mummies evaluated, all showed signs of cocaine and hashish Tetrahydrocannabinol), whereas all but one sampled positive for nicotine.​

And, from the conclusion,

The initial reaction to the findings of Balabanova et. al. was highly critical. These criticisms were not based on a known failing in the authors' research methodology, rather they were attempts to cast doubt on an implication of the research - that cocaine and nicotine were brought to Egypt from the New World before Columbus.​

EDIT: Actually, this link is easier to read: http://www.colostate.edu/Depts/Entomology/courses/en570/papers_2000/wells.html


RC
 
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I didn't mean that we were having the argument in that movie in the sense of a social contest or one any other meta-level where the content is irrelevant except as a means of demonstrating superiority.

<snip>

So by all means, unload, because if this is your area of expertise, then I'd love to hear you info dump
OK. And apologies for overreacting, then (and thanks also for the civil reply - also not always a threat on these forums).

I don't think I have a lot of info to dump - I'm not a historian, and the social/political character of modernity is something I'm in the process of trying to turn into my area of expertise (coming off a base of mainstream analytic political philosophy and constittuional theory).

But I'll try and say a bit more about this bit:

I would put it like this - there has always been widespread trade, but the orientation of entire local economies towards participation in the global economic system is something more modern.
the notion that specific local economies depend in large part or entirely on global trade is not something more modern.
That's not quite what I said.
So like I said upthread, I come at world history/social theory from a more-or-less Weberian perspective. Central to this is the notion of rationalisation, or - as Marshall Hodgson calls it - technicalisation.

So when I said "orientation", and you then said "depend", I suggested that the sort of orientation I have in mind is more than dependence. It's about the way that the ecomic activity is structured and embedded into broader social life. So what I see as characterising modern third world economies, which is different from the past even though there was widespread and economically significant trade in the past, is that the economic component of life is being restructured in various ways which exemplify technicalisation (ie the subordination of all other priorities to productive efficiency) - so land becomes registered and commercialised and old forms of tenure get broken down; peasants become wage labourers; local food or water markets get created where they didn't previously exist, or if they did exist they become stripped of whatever customary normative constraints might have operated to govern them; joint stock companies (corporations) become the predominant economic actors, and being artificial persons and therefore very obviously not participants in any other sort of normative system, a whole range of traditional understandings about the purpose of and limits upon how production will be undertaken are stripped away. (A good discussion, in my view, of the significance to modernity of the role of corporations, and other devices also whereby the law constitutes fairly narrow role moralities at the expense of more traditional normative systems, is Scott Veitch's Law and Irresponsibility. Also, this is not just a third world thing - it's just that the process under discussion is mostly already over in Europe and North America. For a good discussion by a leading English social historian of how these processes unfolded in Britain, see E P Thompson's Whigs and Hunters.)

This is also what I meant upthread when I talked about a more-or-less liberal global economy. It's not just about being able to buy cheap and sell high. It's about the absence of constraints, other than those that inhere in the technical pursuit of the productive enterprise, on the activities of producing, buying and selling. (Weber describes this as the eclipsing of value rationality by instrumental/formal rationality.)

One thing that's interesting about this Weberian line of critique is that it resonates with elements of both conservative and socialist (including but not limited to at least elements of Marx's) critiques of modernity: both conservatives (I'm thinking Burke, Carlyle, Coleridge, Arnold, Ruskin, etc) and socialists (the young Marx, Morris, etc) lament the destructive effect that the liberal economy has on "real social relations". In Weberian terms, I would characterise this as the substitution of technical for value rationality. The significance of liberalism here is that it is the liberal conception of individual freedom which creates the moral justification for stripping away pre-modern social institutions that limit free human action (of which customary land tenures, which often constrain commercial dealings with land, would be one fairly typical example).

Naturally enough I have my own political views about some of these things, although the board rules preclude me from expressing them! But what I think I can say without violating the rules is that the Weberian analysis differs from both the conservatives and the socialists in being perhaps more hard-headed and less romantic - but therefore also tends to have a somewhat pessimistic streak. In practical political/policy terms it also has implications for what one might call the liberal optimism of human rights advocates, because the same social processes that give discourse about universal human rights and freedoms traction in any particular polity or community are also likely to undermine the social institutions in that policy that provide a break on the sorts of excesses that anti-globalisation advocates complain of. (I'm currently co-supervising a doctoral candidate who is dealing with exactly this issue in relation to South Pacific political and legal structures.)

Just to conclude - I don't see the above as an argument that I expect to persuade you (or anyone else). It's an attempt at a fairly broad brush interpretation of a general pattern of social and historical transformation. Different people find different interpretations compelling for different reasons. What makes the Weberian interpretation compelling for me is its "fit" with otherwise very puzzling (to me, at least) features of domestic legal practice, international and especially human rights law and practice, and its capacity to fill significant gaps in mainstream analytic political philosophy.

Depending on one's interests (including political interests) other constraints on an interpretation might seem more salient, and the Weberian interpretation therefore unappealing. There are further things I can say to try to motivate my viewpoint - like talking about some of those puzzling features of legal practice, or some of those political philosophical gaps - but that's getting even close to violating board rules!
 

On the drugged mummies point, I think the author to whom RC has linked is perhaps a little harsh in the reason posited for many scholars doubting the results. The issue of pre-Colombian contact has been a vexed one for a long time, and doubts about it in my view aren't motivated just by Eurocentrism and a conception of Amerindians as primitive.

On the other hand, it's not as if drugs in mummies are the only complicated data point. As I understand it, there are also questions about chicken breeds in south-east Asia, as well as the ongoing debate about how maize made it to sub-saharan Africa.
 

In practical political/policy terms it also has implications for what one might call the liberal optimism of human rights advocates, because the same social processes that give discourse about universal human rights and freedoms traction in any particular polity or community are also likely to undermine the social institutions in that policy that provide a break on the sorts of excesses that anti-globalisation advocates complain of. (I'm currently co-supervising a doctoral candidate who is dealing with exactly this issue in relation to South Pacific political and legal structures.)

I'm gonna have to PM you...
 

On the drugged mummies point, I think the author to whom RC has linked is perhaps a little harsh in the reason posited for many scholars doubting the results. The issue of pre-Colombian contact has been a vexed one for a long time, and doubts about it in my view aren't motivated just by Eurocentrism and a conception of Amerindians as primitive.

On the other hand, it's not as if drugs in mummies are the only complicated data point. As I understand it, there are also questions about chicken breeds in south-east Asia, as well as the ongoing debate about how maize made it to sub-saharan Africa.

Given the information available to him, Umbran was correct to be skeptical. Likewise the initial responses to the research were correct to be skeptical. Anytime there is a complex problem, and you are given only a portion of the relevant data, you should be skeptical of any conclusions drawn. So, if you went with the initial, shallow, data only, you would correctly dismiss the claim as unfounded.

However, a deeper analysis that gains more data, and more relevant data, can demonstrate that the conclusions drawn from the initial (sketchy) data can likewise be unfounded. You would not be correct to entirely dismiss the claim.

Lack of data, and/or only shallow analysis of that data should lead to an agnostic position (we don't know); the skeptical position Umbran and the initial responders present is essentially agnostic....or so it seems to me. In some cases it may veer a bit to far into outright dismissal.


RC
 

Given the information available to him, Umbran was correct to be skeptical.

I think I may still be correct to be skeptical. The references we have here aren't all that clear, but it looks like at least one author is was involved in all of the African mummy cocaine findings - Franz Parsche. If that's true, then it falls a little short of my own criteria for independent confirmation.
 

I think I may still be correct to be skeptical. The references we have here aren't all that clear, but it looks like at least one author is was involved in all of the African mummy cocaine findings - Franz Parsche. If that's true, then it falls a little short of my own criteria for independent confirmation.

And you may still be correct!

Certainly, each person is allowed to set the bar of his or her own skepticism. And, the more complex a problem is, or the more a seeming solution creates problems of its own, the more careful you should be before simply accepting that solution as fact.

Where the other studies offer more than your initial statement in this thread, it is completely reasonable to conclude that they, too, offer too shallow an analysis/too little evidence to safely conclude anything.

But, I am pretty sure that you and I agree broadly (at least) about the nature of evidence. Skeptical agnosticism is not irrational.


RC
 


If D&D is medieval, why are there druids?

D&D is a fantasy pastiche of the middle ages, with significant elements from eras from antiquity through the industrial revolution thrown in in various amounts.

From druids and polytheism in antiquity (and set pieces and plots like gladiatorial combat, world-spanning Empires and human sacrifices), to relatively modern social concepts of social equality, D&D pulls from a wide variety of sources while being nominally "medieval".

I always thought the typical D&D adventure setting was more akin to the Wild West with trappings of the middle ages. There is typically far more sexual and racial equality than there would be historically, the idea of an entire social class of semi-itinerant people carrying the heaviest weapons they can carry on their persons for self defense, seeking fortune and fame, and tending to go off like vigilantes (or at best an ad-hoc quickly deputized representative of local authorities) to bring justice to an evildoer is more suited to Zane Grey than Chaucer.

It is actually mostly disguised Victorian & Wild West culture, trappings and technology of the early renaissance, and some "cool" elements from antiquity and the middle ages dragged along.

I tried doing something close to actual medieval culture once in a D&D game. It didn't go well. I ran a pseudo-historic game set in a fantastic version of the 12th century. It was low-magic, so that magic existed but was still rare and very special. I researched medieval culture and religion to make the game more authentic.

One player was playing a Paladin, and was apparently a devout Catholic. He went into the game with modern-day post Vatican II sensibilities about religion. The first time he went into a church and tried to talk to a priest about theology it got interesting. He accused me of just making stuff up, I had to actually get out the books to prove how much doctrine and everyday worship had changed in the past 800+ years.

Players tried to negotiate with local Barons and Counts the same way they'd barter with a random Mr. Johnson in a Shadowrun game. That didn't go well either.

Basically, players, in my experience, want a medieval fantasy game with the atmosphere and trappings of the late middle ages or renaissance, and a 19th or 20th century culture with a thin veneer of medievalism grafted onto it.
 
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