Ares Land wrote: ↑Fri Feb 07, 2025 8:15 am
Hypothetically, there's an interesting conworlding question -- if we decided to get rid of all post-1800 technology, are we sure we would get lords and peasants again? (To be clear: I don't want that! People would die!)
To the extent that you can describe any pre-1800 society as "lords and peasants", then yes. But there's a lot of complications.
Premodern societies were run in various ways. The Chinese elite was scholar-officials— though make no mistake, these were rich self-perpetuating elites. There were republics— always oligarchies— from Greece to early Rome to Italy to India to Kiev to Tlaxcala. James Scott would point out that as much of a third of humanity lived outside traditional states, either as nomads, hunter-gatherers, or in non-grain-producing areas that never really submitted to states.
Europe had a large middle class, several hundred years old by 1800. As Graeber & Wengrow point out, the French Academy— not exactly a bastion of revolutionary thought— posed the debate question "What is the origin of inequality among men, and is it authorized by natural law?” in 1754: Europeans were already debating equality, largely due to Native North American examples. There were major democratic revolutions before 1800.
Also, if you had the conditions of 1800, why would you not, in twenty years time, have the conditions of 1820? The industrial revolution was already underway; the Royal Society and the Académie des Sciences had been collating scientific work for 140 years; the steamboat, photography, and the railroad were invented in that 20-year period and were probably inevitable. Inventing a society that
stays at 1800 level requires some sort of suppressive mechanism, and that sure isn't coming from the peasants.
Could you have some kind of hippie commune version of the 1800s without lords? Sure, see the Native North Americans again. But it's not accident that they were pushed out of their lands by Europeans— more by disease and demographics than by guns. The secret weapon of peasant states is the womb. (Though even sf/fantasy writers, to say nothing of emperors, forget that premodern agricultural states can't expand into grassland, desert, wetlands, or mountain zones.)
(I'm putting aside all questions of quality of life, which obviously would plummet. And I'm sure everyone here knows this, but in 1800 the villain of the day was not "technology" or "capitalism"; it was mercantilist imperialism. There were proto-capitalists, but they were not in power, and capital did not function as it does today until the invention of the telegraph. Adam Smith pooh-poohs the notion of the corporation.)