Gerhard Lenski's Ecological-Evolutionary Theory
Summary
Via DeepSeek:
Lenski argues that societies evolve primarily through the interplay of technology (the means of harnessing energy and information) and economics (the means of distributing resources and surplus). This co-evolution drives changes in social structure, culture, politics, and even human psychology. It's a materialist, evolutionary paradigm that focuses on systemic change over centuries and millennia.
Gerhard Lenski's seminal work is "Power and Privilege: A Theory of Social Stratification" (1966) and its sequel "Ecological-Evolutionary Theory: Principles and Applications" (2005).
Core Concept: Societies are information-processing systems. The technological base (subsistence technology: hunting/gathering, horticulture, agrarianism, industry) determines the economic surplus available.
This surplus, in turn, shapes:
- Social stratification (who gets the surplus?).
- Population size and complexity.
- The nature of power and ideology.
The Framework's Logic: A Simplified Flow
=> Technology → Economic Productivity & Surplus → Social Reorganization → Cultural/Political Adaptation
Example: The Agrarian Revolution (plow, irrigation, animal traction) led to massive, storable food surplus.
This allowed for:
- Economics: Specialization (artisans, soldiers, priests), trade, taxation, money.
- Social Structure: Large, settled populations; rigid class hierarchies (landowners vs. peasants); empires.
- Politics: Centralized states, bureaucracies, standing armies.
- Culture: Organized religions, written records, monumental architecture.
Discussion
Extensions of Lenski's work
Lenski's framework is the bedrock for more contemporary theories of "Big History" and long-term progress.
- Ian Morris:
His book "Why the West Rules—For Now" operationalizes Lenski's ideas. He creates a quantitative "Social Development Index" based on energy capture, urbanization, information processing, and war-making capacity to compare East and West over 15,000 years.
Key Link: Ian Morris's website for summaries and talks.
- Jack Goldstone:
His theory of "efflorescences" and analyses of the Industrial Revolution fit squarely within techno-economic evolution.
- Joseph Tainter:
"The Collapse of Complex Societies" adds a crucial dimension: diminishing returns on complexity. As societies solve problems with more complex (and costly) techno-economic solutions, they can become vulnerable to collapse.
- Joel Mokyr:
His work on "The Lever of Riches" and the "Culture of Growth" delves into why certain societies develop and adopt transformative technologies (the "Industrial Enlightenment").
- The "Energy Return on Investment" (EROI) School:
This directly links energy capture (a core techno-economic variable) to civilizational trajectory. Thinkers like Thomas Homer-Dixon, and Charles Hall (who formalized EROI) are essential."
More information
Book
* Book: Ecological-Evolutionary Theory: Principles and Applications. Gerhard Lenski, 2005.