Hobbes’s answer to the State of Nature is the immediate establishment of a Leviathan: a single sovereign with absolute political authority. The Leviathan is executive, legislature and judiciary, all rolled into one: he is where the buck stops. Hobbes supports dictatorship because he believes there is no viable alternative. Anything short of absolutism is prone to disintegrate back into anarchy: if the buck doesn’t stop somewhere, the branches of the state that claim a share of sovereignty are doomed to fight for overall control. And anything is better than an “earth… filled with violence”: even tyranny.
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But there is little evidence (as _Dawn_ points out) for the constant "war is of every man against every man". There is no archeological evidence for constant murder. People lived long lives, died of old age. So the author of the review proposes another model, that gets back to what Sartre *actually* meant. Sartre was an existentialist, which meant that true human existence is more than the biological fact that we are alive, but that we need to create our own authentic identity for ourselves. But we don't. Our identity is determined by what others think of us. We feel that we are in hell, says Sartre, because the judgment of other people keeps us from being our authentic selves.
>The No Exit play by Sartre perfectly illustrates...the fact that others--and their gaze--is what alienates and locks me in a particular kind of being, which in turn deprives me of my freedom.
--Philosophy & Philosophers, [_Sartre: Hell Is Other People (Explanation)_](https://www.the-philosophy.com/sartre-hell-is-other-people)
Anthropologist and evolutionary psychologist
Robin Dunbar, in [_Grooming, Gossip, and the Evolution of Language_](https://www.amazon.com/Grooming-Gossip-Evolution-Language-Dunbar/dp/0674363361) (though not in these terms) points out that this is not hell at all. This is heaven. We are biologically driven to seek the approval of others. We get a dopamine rush every time someone likes our posts or retweets our memes. Dunbar says that we are fundamentally social primates, and that our social interactions consist in talking about others. We know our position in society because we know who likes us and who doesn't. Other primates determine status by who grooms who. He claims language evolved so that we could gossip about each other, spreading the "who grooms who" status over larger groups. He talks about a limit to how many people you can have a relationship with--the Dunbar number, about 150--beyond which your brain can't handle it and all this gossip-driven status breaks down.
![Primates grooming and gossiping](/images/gossip.jpg)
--[_The Far Side Gallery_](https://www.amazon.com/Far-Side-Gallery-Gary-Larson/dp/0836220625/), p. 91
So what does that have to do with the lack of civilization? The anonymous reviewer has a hypothesis: "The Gossip Trap":
>But perhaps small groups of humans less than the Dunbar number were organized by none of these [formal structures], since they didn’t need to be—instead, they could be organized via raw social power. That is, you don’t need a formal chief, nor an official council, nor laws or judges. You just need popular people and unpopular people.
>
After [all], who sits with who is something that comes incredibly naturally to humans—it is our point of greatest anxiety and subject to our constant management. This is extremely similar to the grooming hierarchies of primates, and, presumably, our hominid ancestors. So 50,000 BC might be a little more like a high school than anything else.
>
...A “Gossip Trap” is when...to organize your society you are forced to discuss mostly people. It is [_Mean Girls_](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mean_Girls) (and mean boys), but forever. And yes, gossip can act as a leveling mechanism and social power has a bunch of positives—it’s the stuff of life, really. But it’s a terrible way to organize society. So perhaps we leveled ourselves into the ground for 90,000 years. Being in the Gossip Trap means reputational management imposes such a steep slope you can’t climb out of it, and essentially prevents the development of anything interesting, like art or culture or new ideas or new developments or anything at all. Everyone just lives like crabs in a bucket, pulling each other down. All cognitive resources go to reputation management in the group, leaving nothing left in the tank for invention or creativity or art or engineering. Again, much like high school.
--[_Your Book Review: The Dawn Of Everything_](https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/your-book-review-the-dawn-of-everything?s=r)
The state of nature wasn't constant violence and murder. It was constant bickering, gossiping--positive *and* negative--and human society was just another bunch of ape groups.
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So how is that relevant to a Torah perspective? We have [talked about](/PrST+nH+TSAt/) the contrast between the two pictures of society that bookend פרשת נח: דור המבול and דור הפלגה.
דור הפלגה, the generation of the Tower of Babel, is the generation of Hobbes's Leviathan.
{:he}
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