The Hidden Rivers of Human Life
The Hidden Rivers of Human Life Lately, I’ve been noticing something profound about how humans organize themselves. The Anthropologist Mildred Dickemann’s work has made me see it clearly: even when we speak of unity, we are constantly moving through hierarchies. And these hierarchies are not random—they flow like rivers and branch like trees. Think of a river. It begins as a single stream, but soon divides into smaller channels, creating a network of tributaries, each carving its own path while still connected to the main flow. Human social life works much the same way. Large groups split into smaller clusters or cliques, each with its own patterns, norms, and subtle leaders. Ideas, influence, and attention flow through these channels, sometimes merging, sometimes diverging, shaping the landscape of our interactions. Or think of a tree. Its trunk rises from the ground, solid and central, yet from it branch countless limbs, each dividing into smaller branches and twigs. Hierarchies...