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86Thousand400: Sapiens, Time

  • 86thousand400
  • Nov 20, 2018
  • 5 min read

While Sapiens have grown impervious to the whims of nature, they have become ever more subject to the dictates of modern industry and government. The Industrial Revolution opened the way to a long line of experiments in social engineering and an even longer series of unpremeditated changes in daily life and human mentality. One example among many is the replacement of the rythms of traditional agriculture with the uniform and precise schedule of industry.

Traditional agriculture depended on cycles of natural time and organic growth. Most societies were unable to make precise time measurements, nor were they terribly interested in doing so. The world went about its business without clocks and timetables, subject only to the movements of the sun and the growth cycles of plants. There was no uniform working day, and all routines changed drastically from season to season. People knew where the sun was, and watched anxiously for portents of the rainy season and harvest time, but they did not know the hour and hardly cared about the year. If a lost time traveller popped up in a medieval village and asked a passerby. 'What year is this?' The villager would be as bewildered by the question as by the stranger's ridiculous clothing

The Industrial Revolution turned the timetable and the assembly line into a template for almost all human activities. Shortly after factories imposed their time frames on human behaviour, schools too adopted precise timetables, followed by hospitals, government offices and grocery stores. Even in a place devoid of assembly lines and machines, the timetable became king. If the shift at the factory ends at 5pm, the local pub had better open for business at 5:02.

A crucial link in the spreading timetable system was public transportation. If workers needed to start their shift by 08:00, the train or bus had to reach the factory gate by 07:55. A few minutes' delay would lower production and perhaps even lead to lay-offs of the unfortunate latecomers. In 1784 a carriage service with a published schedule began operating in Britain. It's timetable specified only the hour of departure, not arrival. Back then, each British city and town had it's own local time, which could differ from London time by up to half an hour. When it was 12:00 in London, it was perhaps 12:20 in Liverpool and 11:50 in Canterbury. Since there were no telephones, no radio or television, and no fats trains - who could know, and who cared?

The first commercial train service began operating between Liverpool and Manchester in 1830. Ten years later, the first train timetable was issued. The trains were much faster than the old carriages, so the quirky differences in local hours became a severe nuisance. In 1847, British train companies put their heads together and agreed that henceforth all train timetables would be calibrated to Greenwich Observatory time, rather than the local times of Liverpool, Manchester or Glasgow. More and more institutions followed the lead of the train companies. Finally, in 1880, the British government took the unprecedented step of legislating that all timetables in Britain must follow Greenwich. For the first time in history, a country adopted a national time and obliged its population to live according to an artificial clock rather than local one's or sunrise-to-sunset cycles.

This modest beginning spawned a global network of timetables, synchronised down to the tiniest fractions of a second. When the broadcast media - first radio, then television - made their debut, they entered a world of timetables and became its main enforcers and evangelists. Among the first things radio stations broadcast were time signals, beeps that enabled far-flung settlements and ships at sea to set their clocks.

In order to run the timetable network, cheap but precise portable clocks became ubiquitous. In Assyrian, Sassanid and Inca cities there might have been a few sundials. In European medieval cities there was usually a single clock - a giant machine mounted on top of a high tower in the town square. These clock towers were notoriously inaccurate, but since there were no other clocks in town to contradict them, it hardly made any difference.

Today a single affluent family generally has more timepieces at home than an entire medieval country. You can tell the time by looking at your wristwatch, glancing at your Android, peering at the alarm clock by your bed, gazing at the clock on your kitchen wall, staring at the microwave, catching a glimpse of the TV or DVD, or taking in the taskbar on your computer out of the corner of your eye. You need to make a conscious effort not to know what time it is!

(On that note I'm currently in Australia on my travels and last week I didn't look at a clock or watch for a few days and it was bliss. I've been saying it for a long time but I feel time and money are the two biggest stresses that people have in life these days, so the more we can detach or at least simply appreciate they are there but not be 'ruled' by them - the less stressed we become) +gowiththeenergy

The typical person consults these clocks several dozen times a day, because almost everything we do has to be done on time. An alarm clock wakes us up at 7am, we heat our frozen bagel for exactly 55 seconds in the microwave, brush our teeth for three minutes until the electric toothbrush beeps, catch the 7:40 train to work, run on the treadmill at the gym until the beeper announces that half an hour is over, sit down in front of the TV at 7pm to watch our favourite show, get interrupted at preordained moments by commercials that cost $1000 per second, and eventually unload all our angst on a therapist who restricts our prattle to the now standard 55 minute therapy hour.

The Industrial Revolution brought about dozens of major upheavals in human society. Adapting to industrial time is just one of them. Other notable examples include urbanisation, the disappearance of the peasantry, the rise of proletariat, the empowerment of the common person, democratisation, youth culture and the disintegration of patriarchy.

Yet all these upheavals are dwarfed by the most momentous social revolution that ever befell humankind: the collapse of the family and community and their replacement by the state and the market. As best we can tell, from the earliest times, more than a million years ago, humans lived in small, intimate communities, most of whose members were kin. The Cognitive Revolution and the Agricultural Revolution did not change that. They glued families and communities to create tribes, cities, kingdoms and empires, but families and communities remained the basic building blocks of all human societies. The Industrial Revolution, on the other hand, managed within little more than two centuries to break these building blocks into atoms. Most of the traditional functions of families and communities were handed over to states and markets.

 
 
 

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