Energy & Technology
Social Organization
Values & Mortality
Gender & Family
Big ideas & Theories
100

What major change marked the transition from foraging to farming societies?

The domestication of plants and animals (Agricultural Revolution).

100

What type of social structure replaced egalitarian forager bands?

Hierarchical societies with kings, priests, and peasants.

100

What moral shift occurred from foragers to farmers?

From equality and sharing to hierarchy and obedience.

100

Why did patriarchy strengthen in farming societies?

Property and inheritance required paternity certainty, leading to male dominance.

100

What are the three main energy eras in Morris’s model?

Foragers, Farmers, and Fossil-Fuel Users.

200

According to Morris, what does “energy capture” mean?

The amount of energy people extract from their environment to sustain life and society.

200

Why did states and empires emerge during the farming era?

To coordinate food production, protect land, and control surplus resources.

200

Why was obedience valued more than freedom in agrarian societies?

Because social order and cooperation were essential for farming success.

200

What family structure became central to agrarian life?

The patriarchal, extended family tied to land ownership.

200

What is Morris’s overall argument about values?

Human values evolve as adaptive responses to how societies capture and use energy.

300

Why did farming allow for larger populations than foraging?

Farming produced more reliable and abundant food surpluses, supporting more people per unit of land.

300

What role did religion play in maintaining social order?

It justified hierarchy and inequality as natural or divinely ordained.

300

How did attitudes toward violence change?

Interpersonal violence decreased as states enforced laws and order.

300

How were women’s roles defined in the farming era?

Women were often confined to domestic and reproductive roles, supporting male property lines.

300

What does Morris call “Agraria”?

An ideal-type model of the moral and social order of agrarian societies.

400

What did Morris call the “three-pointed star” of farming societies?

The connection between population growth, hierarchy, and energy capture that defined agrarian life.

400

According to Morris, how did property ownership shape social life?

It created inheritance systems, family lineages, and class distinctions.

400

What does Morris mean when he says “energy capture constrains morality”?

The way societies get energy limits what moral systems are practical and stable.

400

How did marriage differ from forager societies?

Legal or religious marriages became formalized to secure inheritance and lineage.

400

How does Morris’s theory explain the rise of modern egalitarian values?

Fossil-fuel energy systems reward equality and freedom instead of hierarchy.

500

Why was hierarchy useful in farming societies, according to Morris?

It organized labor, managed resources, and maintained order in large, settled populations.

500

What factor often determined political and social status in farming societies?

Control over land and agricultural surplus.

500

Give one example of a moral or cultural value that persisted from the farming era into modern times.

Respect for property, patriarchal family roles, or religious authority.

500

Why did Morris see these family systems as adaptive?

They ensured stability, inheritance continuity, and efficient reproduction in agrarian economies.

500

What critique do some scholars make of Morris’s approach?

That it overemphasizes material and economic causes and underplays culture, religion, and human agency.

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