Long Now

Steven Johnson: Wonderland: How Play Made the Modern World


Listen Later

## Inventing toward delight
Humanity has been inventing toward delight for a long time. Johnson began with a slide of shell beads found in Morocco that indicate human interest in personal adornment going back 80,000 years. He showed 50,000-year-old bone flutes found in modern Slovenia that were tuned to musical intervals we would still recognize. Beads and flutes had nothing to do with survival. They were art, conforming to Brian Eno’s definition: “Art is everything you don’t have to do.” It looks frivolous, but Johnson proposed that the pursuit of delight is one of the prime movers of history—of globalization, innovation, and democratization.
Consider spices, a seemingly trivial ornament to food. In the Babylon of 1700 BCE—3,700 years ago—there were cloves that came all the way from Indonesia, 5,000 miles away. Importing eastern spices become so essential that eventually the trade routes defined the map of Islam. Another story from Islamic history: when Baghdad was at its height as one of the world’s most cultured cities around 800 CE, its “House of Wisdom” produced a remarkable text titled “The Book of Ingenious Devices.” In it were beautiful schematic drawings of machines years ahead of anything in Europe—clocks, hydraulic instruments, even a water-powered organ with swappable pin-cylinders that was effectively programmable. Everything in the book was neither tool nor weapon: _they were all toys_.
Consider what happened when cotton arrived in London from India in the late 1600s. Besides being more comfortable than itchy British wool, cotton fabric (called calico) could easily be dyed and patterned, and the democratization of fashion took off, along with a massive global trade in cotton and cotton goods. Soon there was an annual new look to keep up with. And steam-powered looms drove the Industrial Revolution, including the original invention of programmable machinery for Jacquard looms.
Consider the role of public spaces designed for leisure—taverns, coffee shops, parks. Political movements from the American Revolution (Boston’s Green Dragon Tavern) to Gay Rights (Black Cat Tavern in Los Angeles) were fomented in bars. Whole genres of business and finance came out of the coffee shops of London. And once “Nature” was invented by Romantics in the late 1800s, nature-like parks in cities brought delight to urban life, and wilderness became something to protect.
Play invites us to invent freely.
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Long NowBy The Long Now Foundation

  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6

4.6

227 ratings


More shows like Long Now

View all
The New Yorker Radio Hour by WNYC Studios and The New Yorker

The New Yorker Radio Hour

6,832 Listeners

Open to Debate by Open to Debate

Open to Debate

2,157 Listeners

Intelligence Squared by Intelligence Squared

Intelligence Squared

771 Listeners

Making Sense with Sam Harris by Sam Harris

Making Sense with Sam Harris

26,326 Listeners

Conversations with Tyler by Mercatus Center at George Mason University

Conversations with Tyler

2,462 Listeners

Wonder Cabinet by Wonder Cabinet Productions

Wonder Cabinet

916 Listeners

Open Source with Christopher Lydon by Christopher Lydon

Open Source with Christopher Lydon

1,031 Listeners

Philosophy For Our Times by IAI

Philosophy For Our Times

316 Listeners

The Good Fight by Yascha Mounk

The Good Fight

905 Listeners

Long Now: Conversations at The Interval by The Long Now Foundation

Long Now: Conversations at The Interval

46 Listeners

The Michael Shermer Show by Michael Shermer

The Michael Shermer Show

943 Listeners

Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas by Sean Carroll | Wondery

Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas

4,198 Listeners

Your Undivided Attention by The Center for Humane Technology, Tristan Harris, Daniel Barcay and Aza Raskin

Your Undivided Attention

1,606 Listeners

Dwarkesh Podcast by Dwarkesh Patel

Dwarkesh Podcast

532 Listeners

The Ezra Klein Show by New York Times Opinion

The Ezra Klein Show

16,221 Listeners

The Great Simplification with Nate Hagens by Nate Hagens

The Great Simplification with Nate Hagens

422 Listeners