The Origins of Everything

The Origin of Writing Records – Memory Made Permanent


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This episode explores how the invention of record-keeping transformed human civilization from oral memory to written permanence. It begins with early clay tokens in Mesopotamia used for counting goods, showing that writing originated from accounting rather than art. As writing systems evolved — cuneiform, hieroglyphs, oracle bones — humanity gained the ability to preserve laws, stories, and history beyond human memory. The episode highlights the rise of scribes as powerful custodians of truth and the emergence of archives that allowed empires to manage taxes, armies, and populations. Over time, records evolved from scrolls to books to digital databases, creating a civilization that remembers everything — but also struggles with what to forget. Finally, it reflects on the double-edged nature of records: they preserve knowledge but can also distort history and control narratives. Ultimately, the written record is humanity’s oldest act of defiance against oblivion — proof that we were here.

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The Origins of EverythingBy Nathaneal Straker