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                Urantia Book Paper 68 The Dawn Of Civilization
        SPIRITWEB ORG, PROMOTING SPIRITUAL CONSCIOUSNESS ON THE INTERNET.

Subjects Archive The Urantia Book Urantia Book PART III: The History of Urantia
  : The Origin Of Urantia Life Establishment On Urantia The Marine-life Era On
Urantia Urantia During The Early Land-life Era The Mammalian Era On Urantia The
 Dawn Races Of Early Man The First Human Family The Evolutionary Races Of Color
   The Overcontrol Of Evolution The Planetary Prince Of Urantia The Planetary
  Rebellion The Dawn Of Civilization Primitive Human Institutions The Evolution
Of Human Government Development Of The State Government On A Neighboring Planet
  The Garden Of Eden Adam And Eve The Default Of Adam And Eve The Second Garden
The Midway Creatures The Violet Race After The Days Of Adam Andite Expansion In
 The Orient Andite Expansion In The Occident Development Of Modern Civilization
The Evolution Of Marriage The Marriage Institution Marriage And Family Life The
    Origins Of Worship Early Evolution Of Religion The Ghost Cults Fetishes,
  Charms, And Magic Sin, Sacrifice, And Atonement Shamanism--medicine Men And
   Priests The Evolution Of Prayer The Later Evolution Of Religion Machiventa
  Melchizedek The Melchizedek Teachings In The Orient The Melchizedek Teachings
In The Levant Yahweh--god Of The Hebrews Evolution Of The God Concept Among The
    Hebrews The Melchizedek Teachings In The Occident The Social Problems Of
      Religion Religion In Human Experience The Real Nature Of Religion The
  Foundations Of Religious Faith The Reality Of Religious Experience Growth Of
  The Trinity Concept Deity And Reality Universe Levels Of Reality Origin And
 Nature Of Thought Adjusters Mission And Ministry Of Thought Adjusters Relation
 Of Adjusters To Universe Creatures Relation Of Adjusters To Individual Mortals
                                      ...
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                      Paper 68 The Dawn Of Civilization

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Introduction

THIS is the beginning of the narrative of the long, long forward struggle of
the human species from a status that was little better than an animal
existence, through the intervening ages, and down to the later times when a
real, though imperfect, civilization had evolved among the higher races of
mankind.

Civilization is a racial acquirement; it is not biologically inherent; hence
must all children be reared in an environment of culture, while each succeeding
generation of youth must receive anew its education. The superior qualities of
civilization--scientific, philosophic, and religious--are not transmitted from
one generation to another by direct inheritance. These cultural achievements
are preserved only by the enlightened conservation of social inheritance.

Social evolution of the co-operative order was initiated by the Dalamatia
teachers, and for three hundred thousand years mankind was nurtured in the idea
of group activities. The blue man most of all profited by these early social
teachings, the red man to some extent, and the black man least of all. In more
recent times the yellow race and the white race have presented the most
advanced social development on Urantia.

1. PROTECTIVE SOCIALIZATION

When brought closely together, men often learn to like one another, but
primitive man was not naturally overflowing with the spirit of brotherly
feeling and the desire for social contact with his fellows. Rather did the
early races learn by sad experience that "in union there is strength"; and it
is this lack of natural brotherly attraction that now stands in the way of
immediate realization of the brotherhood of man on Urantia.

Association early became the price of survival. The lone man was helpless
unless he bore a tribal mark which testified that he belonged to a group which
would certainly avenge any assault made upon him. Even in the days of Cain it
was fatal to go abroad alone without some mark of group association.
Civilization has become man's insurance against violent death, while the
premiums are paid by submission to society's numerous law demands.

Primitive society was thus founded on the reciprocity of necessity and on the
enhanced safety of association. And human society has evolved in agelong cycles
as a result of this isolation fear and by means of reluctant co-operation.

Primitive human beings early learned that groups are vastly greater and
stronger than the mere sum of their individual units. One hundred men united
and working in unison can move a great stone; a score of well-trained guardians
of the peace can restrain an angry mob. And so society was born, not of mere

                                top of page - 764

association of numbers, but rather as a result of the organization of
intelligent co-operators. But co-operation is not a natural trait of man; he
learns to co-operate first through fear and then later because he discovers it
is most beneficial in meeting the difficulties of time and guarding against the
supposed perils of eternity.

The peoples who thus early organized themselves into a primitive society became
more successful in their attacks on nature as well as in defense against their
fellows; they possessed greater survival possibilities; hence has civilization
steadily progressed on Urantia, notwithstanding its many setbacks. And it is
only because of the enhancement of survival value in association that man's
many blunders have thus far failed to stop or destroy human civilization.

That contemporary cultural society is a rather recent phenomenon is well shown
by the present-day survival of such primitive social conditions as characterize
the Australian natives and the Bushmen and Pygmies of Africa. Among these
backward peoples may be observed something of the early group hostility,
personal suspicion, and other highly antisocial traits which were so
characteristic of all primitive races. These miserable remnants of the
nonsocial peoples of ancient times bear eloquent testimony to the fact that the
natural individualistic tendency of man cannot successfully compete with the
more potent and powerful organizations and associations of social progression.
These backward and suspicious antisocial races that speak a different dialect
every forty or fifty miles illustrate what a world you might now be living in
but for the combined teaching of the corporeal staff of the Planetary Prince
and the later labors of the Adamic group of racial uplifters.

The modern phrase, "back to nature," is a delusion of ignorance, a belief in
the reality of the onetime fictitious "golden age." The only basis for the
legend of the golden age is the historic fact of Dalamatia and Eden. But these
improved societies were far from the realization of utopian dreams.

2. FACTORS IN SOCIAL PROGRESSION

Civilized society is the result of man's early efforts to overcome his dislike
of isolation. But this does not necessarily signify mutual affection, and the
present turbulent state of certain primitive groups well illustrates what the
early tribes came up through. But though the individuals of a civilization may
collide with each other and struggle against one another, and though
civilization itself may appear to be an inconsistent mass of striving and
struggling, it does evidence earnest striving, not the deadly monotony of
stagnation.

While the level of intelligence has contributed considerably to the rate of
cultural progress, society is essentially designed to lessen the risk element
in the individual's mode of living, and it has progressed just as fast as it
has succeeded in lessening pain and increasing the pleasure element in life.
Thus does the whole social body push on slowly toward the goal of
destiny--extinction or survival--depending on whether that goal is
self-maintenance or self-gratification. Self-maintenance originates society,
while excessive self-gratification destroys civilization.

Society is concerned with self-perpetuation, self-maintenance, and
self-gratification, but human self-realization is worthy of becoming the
immediate goal of many cultural groups.

                                top of page - 765

The herd instinct in natural man is hardly sufficient to account for the
development of such a social organization as now exists on Urantia. Though this
innate gregarious propensity lies at the bottom of human society, much of man's
sociability is an acquirement. Two great influences which contributed to the
early association of human beings were food hunger and sex love; these
instinctive urges man shares with the animal world. Two other emotions which
drove human beings together and held them together were vanity and fear, more
particularly ghost fear.

History is but the record of man's agelong food struggle. Primitive man only
thought when he was hungry; food saving was his first self-denial,
self-discipline. With the growth of society, food hunger ceased to be the only
incentive for mutual association. Numerous other sorts of hunger, the
realization of various needs, all led to the closer association of mankind. But
today society is top-heavy with the overgrowth of supposed human needs.
Occidental civilization of the twentieth century groans wearily under the
tremendous overload of luxury and the inordinate multiplication of human
desires and longings. Modern society is enduring the strain of one of its most
dangerous phases of far-flung interassociation and highly complicated
interdependence.

Hunger, vanity, and ghost fear were continuous in their social pressure, but
sex gratification was transient and spasmodic. The sex urge alone did not impel
primitive men and women to assume the heavy burdens of home maintenance. The
early home was founded upon the sex restlessness of the male when deprived of
frequent gratification and upon that devoted mother love of the human female,
which in measure she shares with the females of all the higher animals. The
presence of a helpless baby determined the early differentiation of male and
female activities; the woman had to maintain a settled residence where she
could cultivate the soil. And from earliest times, where woman was has always
been regarded as the home.

Woman thus early became indispensable to the evolving social scheme, not so
much because of the fleeting sex passion as in consequence of food requirement;
she was an essential partner in self-maintenance. She was a food provider, a
beast of burden, and a companion who would stand great abuse without violent
resentment, and in addition to all of these desirable traits, she was an
ever-present means of sex gratification.

Almost everything of lasting value in civilization has its roots in the family.
The family was the first successful peace group, the man and woman learning how
to adjust their antagonisms while at the same time teaching the pursuits of
peace to their children.

The function of marriage in evolution is the insurance of race survival, not
merely the realization of personal happiness; self-maintenance and
self-perpetuation are the real objects of the home. Self-gratification is
incidental and not essential except as an incentive insuring sex association.
Nature demands survival, but the arts of civilization continue to increase the
pleasures of marriage and the satisfactions of family life.

If vanity be enlarged to cover pride, ambition, and honor, then we may discern
not only how these propensities contribute to the formation of human
associations, but how they also hold men together, since such emotions are
futile without an audience to parade before. Soon vanity associated with itself
other emotions

                                top of page - 766

and impulses which required a social arena wherein they might exhibit and
gratify themselves. This group of emotions gave origin to the early beginnings
of all art, ceremonial, and all forms of sportive games and contests.

Vanity contributed mightily to the birth of society; but at the time of these
revelations the devious strivings of a vainglorious generation threaten to
swamp and submerge the whole complicated structure of a highly specialized
civilization. Pleasure-want has long since superseded hunger-want; the
legitimate social aims of self-maintenance are rapidly translating themselves
into base and threatening forms of self-gratification. Self-maintenance builds
society; unbridled self-gratification unfailingly destroys civilization.

3. SOCIALIZING INFLUENCE OF GHOST FEAR

Primitive desires produced the original society, but ghost fear held it
together and imparted an extrahuman aspect to its existence. Common fear was
physiological in origin: fear of physical pain, unsatisfied hunger, or some
earthly calamity; but ghost fear was a new and sublime sort of terror.

Probably the greatest single factor in the evolution of human society was the
ghost dream. Although most dreams greatly perturbed the primitive mind, the
ghost dream actually terrorized early men, driving these superstitious dreamers
into each other's arms in willing and earnest association for mutual protection
against the vague and unseen imaginary dangers of the spirit world. The ghost
dream was one of the earliest appearing differences between the animal and
human types of mind. Animals do not visualize survival after death.

Except for this ghost factor, all society was founded on fundamental needs and
basic biologic urges. But ghost fear introduced a new factor in civilization, a
fear which reaches out and away from the elemental needs of the individual, and
which rises far above even the struggles to maintain the group. The dread of
the departed spirits of the dead brought to light a new and amazing form of
fear, an appalling and powerful terror, which contributed to whipping the loose
social orders of early ages into the more thoroughly disciplined and better
controlled primitive groups of ancient times. This senseless superstition, some
of which still persists, prepared the minds of men, through superstitious fear
of the unreal and the supernatural, for the later discovery of "the fear of the
Lord which is the beginning of wisdom." The baseless fears of evolution are
designed to be supplanted by the awe for Deity inspired by revelation. The
early cult of ghost fear became a powerful social bond, and ever since that
far-distant day mankind has been striving more or less for the attainment of
spirituality.

Hunger and love drove men together; vanity and ghost fear held them together.
But these emotions alone, without the influence of peace-promoting revelations,
are unable to endure the strain of the suspicions and irritations of human
interassociations. Without help from superhuman sources the strain of society
breaks down upon reaching certain limits, and these very influences of social
mobilization--hunger, love, vanity, and fear--conspire to plunge mankind into
war and bloodshed.

The peace tendency of the human race is not a natural endowment; it is derived
from the teachings of revealed religion, from the accumulated experience of the
progressive races, but more especially from the teachings of Jesus, the Prince
of Peace.

                                top of page - 767

4. EVOLUTION OF THE MORES

All modern social institutions arise from the evolution of the primitive
customs of your savage ancestors; the conventions of today are the modified and
expanded customs of yesterday. What habit is to the individual, custom is to
the group; and group customs develop into folkways or tribal traditions--mass
conventions. From these early beginnings all of the institutions of present-day
human society take their humble origin.

It must be borne in mind that the mores originated in an effort to adjust group
living to the conditions of mass existence; the mores were man's first social
institution. And all of these tribal reactions grew out of the effort to avoid
pain and humiliation while at the same time seeking to enjoy pleasure and
power. The origin of folkways, like the origin of languages, is always
unconscious and unintentional and therefore always shrouded in mystery.

Ghost fear drove primitive man to envision the supernatural and thus securely
laid the foundations for those powerful social influences of ethics and
religion which in turn preserved inviolate the mores and customs of society
from generation to generation. The one thing which early established and
crystallized the mores was the belief that the dead were jealous of the ways by
which they had lived and died; therefore would they visit dire punishment upon
those living mortals who dared to treat with careless disdain the rules of
living which they had honored when in the flesh. All this is best illustrated
by the present reverence of the yellow race for their ancestors. Later
developing primitive religion greatly reinforced ghost fear in stabilizing the
mores, but advancing civilization has increasingly liberated mankind from the
bondage of fear and the slavery of superstition.

Prior to the liberating and liberalizing instruction of the Dalamatia teachers,
ancient man was held a helpless victim of the ritual of the mores; the
primitive savage was hedged about by an endless ceremonial. Everything he did
from the time of awakening in the morning to the moment he fell asleep in his
cave at night had to be done just so--in accordance with the folkways of the
tribe. He was a slave to the tyranny of usage; his life contained nothing free,
spontaneous, or original. There was no natural progress toward a higher mental,
moral, or social existence.

Early man was mightily gripped by custom; the savage was a veritable slave to
usage; but there have arisen ever and anon those variations from type who have
dared to inaugurate new ways of thinking and improved methods of living.
Nevertheless, the inertia of primitive man constitutes the biologic safety
brake against precipitation too suddenly into the ruinous maladjustment of a
too rapidly advancing civilization.

But these customs are not an unmitigated evil; their evolution should continue.
It is nearly fatal to the continuance of civilization to undertake their
wholesale modification by radical revolution. Custom has been the thread of
continuity which has held civilization together. The path of human history is
strewn with the remnants of discarded customs and obsolete social practices;
but no civilization has endured which abandoned its mores except for the
adoption of better and more fit customs.

The survival of a society depends chiefly on the progressive evolution of its
mores. The process of custom evolution grows out of the desire for experimen-

                                top of page - 768

tation; new ideas are put forward--competition ensues. A progressing
civilization embraces the progressive idea and endures; time and circumstance
finally select the fitter group for survival. But this does not mean that each
separate and isolated change in the composition of human society has been for
the better. No! indeed no! for there have been many, many retrogressions in the
long forward struggle of Urantia civilization.

5. LAND TECHNIQUES--MAINTENANCE ARTS

Land is the stage of society; men are the actors. And man must ever adjust his
performances to conform to the land situation. The evolution of the mores is
always dependent on the land-man ratio. This is true notwithstanding the
difficulty of its discernment. Man's land technique, or maintenance arts, plus
his standards of living, equal the sum total of the folkways, the mores. And
the sum of man's adjustment to the life demands equals his cultural
civilization.

The earliest human cultures arose along the rivers of the Eastern Hemisphere,
and there were four great steps in the forward march of civilization. They
were:

1. The collection stage. Food coercion, hunger, led to the first form of
industrial organization, the primitive food-gathering lines. Sometimes such a
line of hunger march would be ten miles long as it passed over the land
gleaning food. This was the primitive nomadic stage of culture and is the mode
of life now followed by the African Bushmen.

2. The hunting stage. The invention of weapon tools enabled man to become a
hunter and thus to gain considerable freedom from food slavery. A thoughtful
Andonite who had severely bruised his fist in a serious combat rediscovered the
idea of using a long stick for his arm and a piece of hard flint, bound on the
end with sinews, for his fist. Many tribes made independent discoveries of this
sort, and these various forms of hammers represented one of the great forward
steps in human civilization. Today some Australian natives have progressed
little beyond this stage.

The blue men became expert hunters and trappers; by fencing the rivers they
caught fish in great numbers, drying the surplus for winter use. Many forms of
ingenious snares and traps were employed in catching game, but the more
primitive races did not hunt the larger animals.

3. The pastoral stage. This phase of civilization was made possible by the
domestication of animals. The Arabs and the natives of Africa are among the
more recent pastoral peoples.

Pastoral living afforded further relief from food slavery; man learned to live
on the interest of his capital, the increase in his flocks; and this provided
more leisure for culture and progress.

Prepastoral society was one of sex co-operation, but the spread of animal
husbandry reduced women to the depths of social slavery. In earlier times it
was man's duty to secure the animal food, woman's business to provide the
vegetable edibles. Therefore, when man entered the pastoral era of his
existence, woman's dignity fell greatly. She must still toil to produce the
vegetable necessities of life, whereas the man need only go to his herds to
provide an abundance of animal food. Man thus became relatively independent of
woman; throughout the entire pastoral age woman's status steadily declined. By
the close of this

                                top of page - 769

era she had become scarcely more than a human animal, consigned to work and to
bear human offspring, much as the animals of the herd were expected to labor
and bring forth young. The men of the pastoral ages had great love for their
cattle; all the more pity they could not have developed a deeper affection for
their wives.

4. The agricultural stage. This era was brought about by the domestication of
plants, and it represents the highest type of material civilization. Both
Caligastia and Adam endeavored to teach horticulture and agriculture. Adam and
Eve were gardeners, not shepherds, and gardening was an advanced culture in
those days. The growing of plants exerts an ennobling influence on all races of
mankind.

Agriculture more than quadrupled the land-man ratio of the world. It may be
combined with the pastoral pursuits of the former cultural stage. When the
three stages overlap, men hunt and women till the soil.

There has always been friction between the herders and the tillers of the soil.
The hunter and herder were militant, warlike; the agriculturist is a more
peace-loving type. Association with animals suggests struggle and force;
association with plants instills patience, quiet, and peace. Agriculture and
industrialism are the activities of peace. But the weakness of both, as world
social activities, is that they lack excitement and adventure.

Human society has evolved from the hunting stage through that of the herders to
the territorial stage of agriculture. And each stage of this progressive
civilization was accompanied by less and less of nomadism; more and more man
began to live at home.

And now is industry supplementing agriculture, with consequently increased
urbanization and multiplication of nonagricultural groups of citizenship
classes. But an industrial era cannot hope to survive if its leaders fail to
recognize that even the highest social developments must ever rest upon a sound
agricultural basis.

6. EVOLUTION OF CULTURE

Man is a creature of the soil, a child of nature; no matter how earnestly he
may try to escape from the land, in the last reckoning he is certain to fail.
"Dust you are and to dust shall you return" is literally true of all mankind.
The basic struggle of man was, and is, and ever shall be, for land. The first
social associations of primitive human beings were for the purpose of winning
these land struggles. The land-man ratio underlies all social civilization.

Man's intelligence, by means of the arts and sciences, increased the land
yield; at the same time the natural increase in offspring was somewhat brought
under control, and thus was provided the sustenance and leisure to build a
cultural civilization.

Human society is controlled by a law which decrees that the population must
vary directly in accordance with the land arts and inversely with a given
standard of living. Throughout these early ages, even more than at present, the
law of supply and demand as concerned men and land determined the estimated
value of both. During the times of plentiful land--unoccupied territory--the
need for men was great, and therefore the value of human life was much
enhanced; hence the loss of life was more horrifying. During periods of land
scarcity and as-

                                top of page - 770

sociated overpopulation, human life became comparatively cheapened so that war,
famine, and pestilence were regarded with less concern.

When the land yield is reduced or the population is increased, the inevitable
struggle is renewed; the very worst traits of human nature are brought to the
surface. The improvement of the land yield, the extension of the mechanical
arts, and the reduction of population all tend to foster the development of the
better side of human nature.

Frontier society develops the unskilled side of humanity; the fine arts and
true scientific progress, together with spiritual culture, have all thrived
best in the larger centers of life when supported by an agricultural and
industrial population slightly under the land-man ratio. Cities always multiply
the power of their inhabitants for either good or evil.

The size of the family has always been influenced by the standards of living.
The higher the standard the smaller the family, up to the point of established
status or gradual extinction.

All down through the ages the standards of living have determined the quality
of a surviving population in contrast with mere quantity. Local class standards
of living give origin to new social castes, new mores. When standards of living
become too complicated or too highly luxurious, they speedily become suicidal.
Caste is the direct result of the high social pressure of keen competition
produced by dense populations.

The early races often resorted to practices designed to restrict population;
all primitive tribes killed deformed and sickly children. Girl babies were
frequently killed before the times of wife purchase. Children were sometimes
strangled at birth, but the favorite method was exposure. The father of twins
usually insisted that one be killed since multiple births were believed to be
caused either by magic or by infidelity. As a rule, however, twins of the same
sex were spared. While these taboos on twins were once well-nigh universal,
they were never a part of the Andonite mores; these peoples always regarded
twins as omens of good luck.

Many races learned the technique of abortion, and this practice became very
common after the establishment of the taboo on childbirth among the unmarried.
It was long the custom for a maiden to kill her offspring, but among more
civilized groups these illegitimate children became the wards of the girl's
mother. Many primitive clans were virtually exterminated by the practice of
both abortion and infanticide. But regardless of the dictates of the mores,
very few children were ever destroyed after having once been suckled--maternal
affection is too strong.

Even in the twentieth century there persist remnants of these primitive
population controls. There is a tribe in Australia whose mothers refuse to rear
more than two or three children. Not long since, one cannibalistic tribe ate
every fifth child born. In Madagascar some tribes still destroy all children
born on certain unlucky days, resulting in the death of about twenty-five per
cent of all babies.

From a world standpoint, overpopulation has never been a serious problem in the
past, but if war is lessened and science increasingly controls human diseases,
it may become a serious problem in the near future. At such a time the great
test of the wisdom of world leadership will present itself. Will Urantia rulers
have the insight and courage to foster the multiplication of the average

                                top of page - 771

or stabilized human being instead of the extremes of the supernormal and the
enormously increasing groups of the subnormal? The normal man should be
fostered; he is the backbone of civilization and the source of the mutant
geniuses of the race. The subnormal man should be kept under society's control;
no more should be produced than are required to administer the lower levels of
industry, those tasks requiring intelligence above the animal level but making
such low-grade demands as to prove veritable slavery and bondage for the higher
types of mankind.

[Presented by a Melchizedek sometime stationed on Urantia.]

                                top of page - 772

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subjects Archive The Urantia Book Urantia Book PART III: The History of Urantia
  : The Origin Of Urantia Life Establishment On Urantia The Marine-life Era On
Urantia Urantia During The Early Land-life Era The Mammalian Era On Urantia The
 Dawn Races Of Early Man The First Human Family The Evolutionary Races Of Color
   The Overcontrol Of Evolution The Planetary Prince Of Urantia The Planetary
  Rebellion The Dawn Of Civilization Primitive Human Institutions The Evolution
Of Human Government Development Of The State Government On A Neighboring Planet
  The Garden Of Eden Adam And Eve The Default Of Adam And Eve The Second Garden
The Midway Creatures The Violet Race After The Days Of Adam Andite Expansion In
 The Orient Andite Expansion In The Occident Development Of Modern Civilization
The Evolution Of Marriage The Marriage Institution Marriage And Family Life The
    Origins Of Worship Early Evolution Of Religion The Ghost Cults Fetishes,
  Charms, And Magic Sin, Sacrifice, And Atonement Shamanism--medicine Men And
   Priests The Evolution Of Prayer The Later Evolution Of Religion Machiventa
  Melchizedek The Melchizedek Teachings In The Orient The Melchizedek Teachings
In The Levant Yahweh--god Of The Hebrews Evolution Of The God Concept Among The
    Hebrews The Melchizedek Teachings In The Occident The Social Problems Of
      Religion Religion In Human Experience The Real Nature Of Religion The
  Foundations Of Religious Faith The Reality Of Religious Experience Growth Of
  The Trinity Concept Deity And Reality Universe Levels Of Reality Origin And
 Nature Of Thought Adjusters Mission And Ministry Of Thought Adjusters Relation
 Of Adjusters To Universe Creatures Relation Of Adjusters To Individual Mortals
  The Adjuster And The Soul Personality Survival Seraphic Guardians Of Destiny
  Seraphic Planetary Government The Supreme Being The Almighty Supreme God The
  Supreme Supreme And Ultimate--time And Space The Bestowals Of Christ Michael

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