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Before the sword, there was the wall. Before the warrior, the hoarder. This episode traces the ancient and enduring shift from tool to weapon, from relation to possession, from gesture to threat. Beginning in the early oasis-city of Jericho and moving through philosophy, metallurgy, and mythology, we explore how fear reshaped our tools — and with them, our social world.
From Locke’s defense of property to Rousseau’s paradox of the “noble savage,” from Indigenous cosmologies of kinship to the gleam of the bronze khopesh, this is an inquiry into how violence becomes worldview — how the blade becomes author.
What if civilization didn’t begin with cultivation, but with a fear of losing what we could not hold with love?
Before the sword, there was the wall. Before the warrior, the hoarder. This episode traces the ancient and enduring shift from tool to weapon, from relation to possession, from gesture to threat. Beginning in the early oasis-city of Jericho and moving through philosophy, metallurgy, and mythology, we explore how fear reshaped our tools — and with them, our social world.
From Locke’s defense of property to Rousseau’s paradox of the “noble savage,” from Indigenous cosmologies of kinship to the gleam of the bronze khopesh, this is an inquiry into how violence becomes worldview — how the blade becomes author.
What if civilization didn’t begin with cultivation, but with a fear of losing what we could not hold with love?