Urantia Book Paper 69 Primitive Human Institutions
       SPIRITWEB ORG, PROMOTING SPIRITUAL CONSCIOUSNESS ON THE INTERNET.

Subjects Archive The Urantia Book Urantia Book PART III: The History of Urantia
 : The Origin Of Urantia Life Establishment On Urantia The Marine-life Era On
Urantia Urantia During The Early Land-life Era The Mammalian Era On Urantia The
Dawn Races Of Early Man The First Human Family The Evolutionary Races Of Color
  The Overcontrol Of Evolution The Planetary Prince Of Urantia The Planetary
 Rebellion The Dawn Of Civilization Primitive Human Institutions The Evolution
Of Human Government Development Of The State Government On A Neighboring Planet
 The Garden Of Eden Adam And Eve The Default Of Adam And Eve The Second Garden
The Midway Creatures The Violet Race After The Days Of Adam Andite Expansion In
The Orient Andite Expansion In The Occident Development Of Modern Civilization
The Evolution Of Marriage The Marriage Institution Marriage And Family Life The
   Origins Of Worship Early Evolution Of Religion The Ghost Cults Fetishes,
 Charms, And Magic Sin, Sacrifice, And Atonement Shamanism--medicine Men And
  Priests The Evolution Of Prayer The Later Evolution Of Religion Machiventa
 Melchizedek The Melchizedek Teachings In The Orient The Melchizedek Teachings
In The Levant Yahweh--god Of The Hebrews Evolution Of The God Concept Among The
   Hebrews The Melchizedek Teachings In The Occident The Social Problems Of
     Religion Religion In Human Experience The Real Nature Of Religion The
 Foundations Of Religious Faith The Reality Of Religious Experience Growth Of
 The Trinity Concept Deity And Reality Universe Levels Of Reality Origin And
Nature Of Thought Adjusters Mission And Ministry Of Thought Adjusters Relation
Of Adjusters To Universe Creatures Relation Of Adjusters To Individual Mortals
                                     ...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   Paper 69 Primitive Human Institutions

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Introduction

EMOTIONALLY, man transcends his animal ancestors in his ability to appreciate
humor, art, and religion. Socially, man exhibits his superiority in that he is
a toolmaker, a communicator, and an institution builder.

When human beings long maintain social groups, such aggregations always result
in the creation of certain activity trends which culminate in
institutionalization. Most of man's institutions have proved to be laborsaving
while at the same time contributing something to the enhancement of group
security.

Civilized man takes great pride in the character, stability, and continuity of
his established institutions, but all human institutions are merely the
accumulated mores of the past as they have been conserved by taboos and
dignified by religion. Such legacies become traditions, and traditions
ultimately metamorphose into conventions.

1. BASIC HUMAN INSTITUTIONS

All human institutions minister to some social need, past or present,
notwithstanding that their overdevelopment unfailingly detracts from the
worthwhileness of the individual in that personality is overshadowed and
initiative is diminished. Man should control his institutions rather than
permit himself to be dominated by these creations of advancing civilization.

Human institutions are of three general classes:

1. The institutions of self-maintenance. These institutions embrace those
practices growing out of food hunger and its associated instincts of
self-preservation. They include industry, property, war for gain, and all the
regulative machinery of society. Sooner or later the fear instinct fosters the
establishment of these institutions of survival by means of taboo, convention,
and religious sanction. But fear, ignorance, and superstition have played a
prominent part in the early origin and subsequent development of all human
institutions.

2. The institutions of self-perpetuation. These are the establishments of
society growing out of sex hunger, maternal instinct, and the higher tender
emotions of the races. They embrace the social safeguards of the home and the
school, of family life, education, ethics, and religion. They include marriage
customs, war for defense, and home building.

3. The institutions of self-gratification. These are the practices growing out
of vanity proclivities and pride emotions; and they embrace customs in dress
and personal adornment, social usages, war for glory, dancing, amusement,
games, and other phases of sensual gratification. But civilization has never
evolved distinctive institutions of self-gratification.

                               top of page - 773

These three groups of social practices are intimately interrelated and minutely
interdependent the one upon the other. On Urantia they represent a complex
organization which functions as a single social mechanism.

2. THE DAWN OF INDUSTRY

Primitive industry slowly grew up as an insurance against the terrors of
famine. Early in his existence man began to draw lessons from some of the
animals that, during a harvest of plenty, store up food against the days of
scarcity.

Before the dawn of early frugality and primitive industry the lot of the
average tribe was one of destitution and real suffering. Early man had to
compete with the whole animal world for his food. Competition-gravity ever
pulls man down toward the beast level; poverty is his natural and tyrannical
estate. Wealth is not a natural gift; it results from labor, knowledge, and
organization.

Primitive man was not slow to recognize the advantages of association.
Association led to organization, and the first result of organization was
division of labor, with its immediate saving of time and materials. These
specializations of labor arose by adaptation to pressure--pursuing the paths of
lessened resistance. Primitive savages never did any real work cheerfully or
willingly. With them conformity was due to the coercion of necessity.

Primitive man disliked hard work, and he would not hurry unless confronted by
grave danger. The time element in labor, the idea of doing a given task within
a certain time limit, is entirely a modern notion. The ancients were never
rushed. It was the double demands of the intense struggle for existence and of
the ever-advancing standards of living that drove the naturally inactive races
of early man into avenues of industry.

Labor, the efforts of design, distinguishes man from the beast, whose exertions
are largely instinctive. The necessity for labor is man's paramount blessing.
The Prince's staff all worked; they did much to ennoble physical labor on
Urantia. Adam was a gardener; the God of the Hebrews labored--he was the
creator and upholder of all things. The Hebrews were the first tribe to put a
supreme premium on industry; they were the first people to decree that "he who
does not work shall not eat." But many of the religions of the world reverted
to the early ideal of idleness. Jupiter was a reveler, and Buddha became a
reflective devotee of leisure.

The Sangik tribes were fairly industrious when residing away from the tropics.
But there was a long, long struggle between the lazy devotees of magic and the
apostles of work--those who exercised foresight.

The first human foresight was directed toward the preservation of fire, water,
and food. But primitive man was a natural-born gambler; he always wanted to get
something for nothing, and all too often during these early times the success
which accrued from patient practice was attributed to charms. Magic was slow to
give way before foresight, self-denial, and industry.

3. THE SPECIALIZATION OF LABOR

The divisions of labor in primitive society were determined first by natural,
and then by social, circumstances. The early order of specialization in labor
was:

                               top of page - 774

1. Specialization based on sex. Woman's work was derived from the selective
presence of the child; women naturally love babies more than men do. Thus woman
became the routine worker, while man became the hunter and fighter, engaging in
accentuated periods of work and rest.

All down through the ages the taboos have operated to keep woman strictly in
her own field. Man has most selfishly chosen the more agreeable work, leaving
the routine drudgery to woman. Man has always been ashamed to do woman's work,
but woman has never shown any reluctance to doing man's work. But strange to
record, both men and women have always worked together in building and
furnishing the home.

2. Modification consequent upon age and disease. These differences determined
the next division of labor. The old men and cripples were early set to work
making tools and weapons. They were later assigned to building irrigation
works.

3. Differentiation based on religion. The medicine men were the first human
beings to be exempted from physical toil; they were the pioneer professional
class. The smiths were a small group who competed with the medicine men as
magicians. Their skill in working with metals made the people afraid of them.
The "white smiths" and the "black smiths" gave origin to the early beliefs in
white and black magic. And this belief later became involved in the
superstition of good and bad ghosts, good and bad spirits.

Smiths were the first nonreligious group to enjoy special privileges. They were
regarded as neutrals during war, and this extra leisure led to their becoming,
as a class, the politicians of primitive society. But through gross abuse of
these privileges the smiths became universally hated, and the medicine men lost
no time in fostering hatred for their competitors. In this first contest
between science and religion, religion (superstition) won. After being driven
out of the villages, the smiths maintained the first inns, public
lodginghouses, on the outskirts of the settlements.

4. Master and slave. The next differentiation of labor grew out of the
relations of the conqueror to the conquered, and that meant the beginning of
human slavery.

5. Differentiation based on diverse physical and mental endowments. Further
divisions of labor were favored by the inherent differences in men; all human
beings are not born equal.

The early specialists in industry were the flint flakers and stonemasons; next
came the smiths. Subsequently group specialization developed; whole families
and clans dedicated themselves to certain sorts of labor. The origin of one of
the earliest castes of priests, apart from the tribal medicine men, was due to
the superstitious exaltation of a family of expert swordmakers.

The first group specialists in industry were rock salt exporters and potters.
Women made the plain pottery and men the fancy. Among some tribes sewing and
weaving were done by women, in others by the men.

The early traders were women; they were employed as spies, carrying on commerce
as a side line. Presently trade expanded, the women acting as
intermediaries--jobbers. Then came the merchant class, charging a commission,
profit, for their services. Growth of group barter developed into commerce; and
following the exchange of commodities came the exchange of skilled labor.

                               top of page - 775

4. THE BEGINNINGS OF TRADE

Just as marriage by contract followed marriage by capture, so trade by barter
followed seizure by raids. But a long period of piracy intervened between the
early practices of silent barter and the later trade by modern exchange
methods.

The first barter was conducted by armed traders who would leave their goods on
a neutral spot. Women held the first markets; they were the earliest traders,
and this was because they were the burden bearers; the men were warriors. Very
early the trading counter was developed, a wall wide enough to prevent the
traders reaching each other with weapons.

A fetish was used to stand guard over the deposits of goods for silent barter.
Such market places were secure against theft; nothing would be removed except
by barter or purchase; with a fetish on guard the goods were always safe. The
early traders were scrupulously honest within their own tribes but regarded it
as all right to cheat distant strangers. Even the early Hebrews recognized a
separate code of ethics in their dealings with the gentiles.

For ages silent barter continued before men would meet, unarmed, on the sacred
market place. These same market squares became the first places of sanctuary
and in some countries were later known as "cities of refuge." Any fugitive
reaching the market place was safe and secure against attack.

The first weights were grains of wheat and other cereals. The first medium of
exchange was a fish or a goat. Later the cow became a unit of barter.

Modern writing originated in the early trade records; the first literature of
man was a trade-promotion document, a salt advertisement. Many of the earlier
wars were fought over natural deposits, such as flint, salt, and metals. The
first formal tribal treaty concerned the intertribalizing of a salt deposit.
These treaty spots afforded opportunity for friendly and peaceful interchange
of ideas and the intermingling of various tribes.

Writing progressed up through the stages of the "message stick," knotted cords,
picture writing, hieroglyphics, and wampum belts, to the early symbolic
alphabets. Message sending evolved from the primitive smoke signal up through
runners, animal riders, railroads, and airplanes, as well as telegraph,
telephone, and wireless communication.

New ideas and better methods were carried around the inhabited world by the
ancient traders. Commerce, linked with adventure, led to exploration and
discovery. And all of these gave birth to transportation. Commerce has been the
great civilizer through promoting the cross-fertilization of culture.

5. THE BEGINNINGS OF CAPITAL

Capital is labor applied as a renunciation of the present in favor of the
future. Savings represent a form of maintenance and survival insurance. Food
hoarding developed self-control and created the first problems of capital and
labor. The man who had food, provided he could protect it from robbers, had a
distinct advantage over the man who had no food.

The early banker was the valorous man of the tribe. He held the group treasures
on deposit, while the entire clan would defend his hut in event of

                               top of page - 776

attack. Thus the accumulation of individual capital and group wealth
immediately led to military organization. At first such precautions were
designed to defend property against foreign raiders, but later on it became the
custom to keep the military organization in practice by inaugurating raids on
the property and wealth of neighboring tribes.

The basic urges which led to the accumulation of capital were:

1. Hunger--associated with foresight. Food saving and preservation meant power
and comfort for those who possessed sufficient foresight thus to provide for
future needs. Food storage was adequate insurance against famine and disaster.
And the entire body of primitive mores was really designed to help man
subordinate the present to the future.

2. Love of family--desire to provide for their wants. Capital represents the
saving of property in spite of the pressure of the wants of today in order to
insure against the demands of the future. A part of this future need may have
to do with one's posterity.

3. Vanity--longing to display one's property accumulations. Extra clothing was
one of the first badges of distinction. Collection vanity early appealed to the
pride of man.

4. Position--eagerness to buy social and political prestige. There early sprang
up a commercialized nobility, admission to which depended on the performance of
some special service to royalty or was granted frankly for the payment of
money.

5. Power--the craving to be master. Treasure lending was carried on as a means
of enslavement, one hundred per cent a year being the loan rate of these
ancient times. The moneylenders made themselves kings by creating a standing
army of debtors. Bond servants were among the earliest form of property to be
accumulated, and in olden days debt slavery extended even to the control of the
body after death.

6. Fear of the ghosts of the dead--priest fees for protection. Men early began
to give death presents to the priests with a view to having their property used
to facilitate their progress through the next life. The priesthoods thus became
very rich; they were chief among ancient capitalists.

7. Sex urge--the desire to buy one or more wives. Man's first form of trading
was woman exchange; it long preceded horse trading. But never did the barter in
sex slaves advance society; such traffic was and is a racial disgrace, for at
one and the same time it hindered the development of family life and polluted
the biologic fitness of superior peoples.

8. Numerous forms of self-gratification. Some sought wealth because it
conferred power; others toiled for property because it meant ease. Early man
(and some later-day ones) tended to squander his resources on luxury.
Intoxicants and drugs intrigued the primitive races.

As civilization developed, men acquired new incentives for saving; new wants
were rapidly added to the original food hunger. Poverty became so abhorred that
only the rich were supposed to go direct to heaven when they died. Property
became so highly valued that to give a pretentious feast would wipe a dishonor
from one's name.

                               top of page - 777

Accumulations of wealth early became the badge of social distinction.
Individuals in certain tribes would accumulate property for years just to
create an impression by burning it up on some holiday or by freely distributing
it to fellow tribesmen. This made them great men. Even modern peoples revel in
the lavish distribution of Christmas gifts, while rich men endow great
institutions of philanthropy and learning. Man's technique varies, but his
disposition remains quite unchanged.

But it is only fair to record that many an ancient rich man distributed much of
his fortune because of the fear of being killed by those who coveted his
treasures. Wealthy men commonly sacrificed scores of slaves to show disdain for
wealth.

Though capital has tended to liberate man, it has greatly complicated his
social and industrial organization. The abuse of capital by unfair capitalists
does not destroy the fact that it is the basis of modern industrial society.
Through capital and invention the present generation enjoys a higher degree of
freedom than any that ever preceded it on earth. This is placed on record as a
fact and not in justification of the many misuses of capital by thoughtless and
selfish custodians.

6. FIRE IN RELATION TO CIVILIZATION

Primitive society with its four divisions--industrial, regulative, religious,
and military--rose through the instrumentality of fire, animals, slaves, and
property.

Fire building, by a single bound, forever separated man from animal; it is the
basic human invention, or discovery. Fire enabled man to stay on the ground at
night as all animals are afraid of it. Fire encouraged eventide social
intercourse; it not only protected against cold and wild beasts but was also
employed as security against ghosts. It was at first used more for light than
heat; many backward tribes refuse to sleep unless a flame burns all night.

Fire was a great civilizer, providing man with his first means of being
altruistic without loss by enabling him to give live coals to a neighbor
without depriving himself. The household fire, which was attended by the mother
or eldest daughter, was the first educator, requiring watchfulness and
dependability. The early home was not a building but the family gathered about
the fire, the family hearth. When a son founded a new home, he carried a
firebrand from the family hearth.

Though Andon, the discoverer of fire, avoided treating it as an object of
worship, many of his descendants regarded the flame as a fetish or as a spirit.
They failed to reap the sanitary benefits of fire because they would not burn
refuse. Primitive man feared fire and always sought to keep it in good humor,
hence the sprinkling of incense. Under no circumstances would the ancients spit
in a fire, nor would they ever pass between anyone and a burning fire. Even the
iron pyrites and flints used in striking fire were held sacred by early
mankind.

It was a sin to extinguish a flame; if a hut caught fire, it was allowed to
burn. The fires of the temples and shrines were sacred and were never permitted
to go out except that it was the custom to kindle new flames annually or after
some calamity. Women were selected as priests because they were custodians of
the home fires.

                               top of page - 778

The early myths about how fire came down from the gods grew out of the
observations of fire caused by lightning. These ideas of supernatural origin
led directly to fire worship, and fire worship led to the custom of "passing
through fire," a practice carried on up to the times of Moses. And there still
persists the idea of passing through fire after death. The fire myth was a
great bond in early times and still persists in the symbolism of the Parsees.

Fire led to cooking, and "raw eaters" became a term of derision. And cooking
lessened the expenditure of vital energy necessary for the digestion of food
and so left early man some strength for social culture, while animal husbandry,
by reducing the effort necessary to secure food, provided time for social
activities.

It should be remembered that fire opened the doors to metalwork and led to the
subsequent discovery of steam power and the present-day uses of electricity.

7. THE UTILIZATION OF ANIMALS

To start with, the entire animal world was man's enemy; human beings had to
learn to protect themselves from the beasts. First, man ate the animals but
later learned to domesticate and make them serve him.

The domestication of animals came about accidentally. The savage would hunt
herds much as the American Indians hunted the bison. By surrounding the herd
they could keep control of the animals, thus being able to kill them as they
were required for food. Later, corrals were constructed, and entire herds would
be captured.

It was easy to tame some animals, but like the elephant, many of them would not
reproduce in captivity. Still further on it was discovered that certain species
of animals would submit to man's presence, and that they would reproduce in
captivity. The domestication of animals was thus promoted by selective
breeding, an art which has made great progress since the days of Dalamatia.

The dog was the first animal to be domesticated, and the difficult experience
of taming it began when a certain dog, after following a hunter around all day,
actually went home with him. For ages dogs were used for food, hunting,
transportation, and companionship. At first dogs only howled, but later on they
learned to bark. The dog's keen sense of smell led to the notion it could see
spirits, and thus arose the dog-fetish cults. The employment of watchdogs made
it first possible for the whole clan to sleep at night. It then became the
custom to employ watchdogs to protect the home against spirits as well as
material enemies. When the dog barked, man or beast approached, but when the
dog howled, spirits were near. Even now many still believe that a dog's howling
at night betokens death.

When man was a hunter, he was fairly kind to woman, but after the domestication
of animals, coupled with the Caligastia confusion, many tribes shamefully
treated their women. They treated them altogether too much as they treated
their animals. Man's brutal treatment of woman constitutes one of the darkest
chapters of human history.

8. SLAVERY AS A FACTOR IN CIVILIZATION

Primitive man never hesitated to enslave his fellows. Woman was the first
slave, a family slave. Pastoral man enslaved woman as his inferior sex partner.

                               top of page - 779

This sort of sex slavery grew directly out of man's decreased dependence upon
woman.

Not long ago enslavement was the lot of those military captives who refused to
accept the conqueror's religion. In earlier times captives were either eaten,
tortured to death, set to fighting each other, sacrificed to spirits, or
enslaved. Slavery was a great advancement over massacre and cannibalism.

Enslavement was a forward step in the merciful treatment of war captives. The
ambush of Ai, with the wholesale slaughter of men, women, and children, only
the king being saved to gratify the conqueror's vanity, is a faithful picture
of the barbaric slaughter practiced by even supposedly civilized peoples. The
raid upon Og, the king of Bashan, was equally brutal and effective. The Hebrews
"utterly destroyed" their enemies, taking all their property as spoils. They
put all cities under tribute on pain of the "destruction of all males." But
many of the contemporary tribes, those having less tribal egotism, had long
since begun to practice the adoption of superior captives.

The hunter, like the American red man, did not enslave. He either adopted or
killed his captives. Slavery was not prevalent among the pastoral peoples, for
they needed few laborers. In war the herders made a practice of killing all men
captives and taking as slaves only the women and children. The Mosaic code
contained specific directions for making wives of these women captives. If not
satisfactory, they could be sent away, but the Hebrews were not allowed to sell
such rejected consorts as slaves--that was at least one advance in
civilization. Though the social standards of the Hebrews were crude, they were
far above those of the surrounding tribes.

The herders were the first capitalists; their herds represented capital, and
they lived on the interest--the natural increase. And they were disinclined to
trust this wealth to the keeping of either slaves or women. But later on they
took male prisoners and forced them to cultivate the soil. This is the early
origin of serfdom--man attached to the land. The Africans could easily be
taught to till the soil; hence they became the great slave race.

Slavery was an indispensable link in the chain of human civilization. It was
the bridge over which society passed from chaos and indolence to order and
civilized activities; it compelled backward and lazy peoples to work and thus
provide wealth and leisure for the social advancement of their superiors.

The institution of slavery compelled man to invent the regulative mechanism of
primitive society; it gave origin to the beginnings of government. Slavery
demands strong regulation and during the European Middle Ages virtually
disappeared because the feudal lords could not control the slaves. The backward
tribes of ancient times, like the native Australians of today, never had
slaves.

True, slavery was oppressive, but it was in the schools of oppression that man
learned industry. Eventually the slaves shared the blessings of a higher
society which they had so unwillingly helped create. Slavery creates an
organization of culture and social achievement but soon insidiously attacks
society internally as the gravest of all destructive social maladies.

Modern mechanical invention rendered the slave obsolete. Slavery, like
polygamy, is passing because it does not pay. But it has always proved
disastrous suddenly to liberate great numbers of slaves; less trouble ensues
when they are gradually emancipated.

                               top of page - 780

Today, men are not social slaves, but thousands allow ambition to enslave them
to debt. Involuntary slavery has given way to a new and improved form of
modified industrial servitude.

While the ideal of society is universal freedom, idleness should never be
tolerated. All able-bodied persons should be compelled to do at least a
self-sustaining amount of work.

Modern society is in reverse. Slavery has nearly disappeared; domesticated
animals are passing. Civilization is reaching back to fire--the inorganic
world--for power. Man came up from savagery by way of fire, animals, and
slavery; today he reaches back, discarding the help of slaves and the
assistance of animals, while he seeks to wrest new secrets and sources of
wealth and power from the elemental storehouse of nature.

9. PRIVATE PROPERTY

While primitive society was virtually communal, primitive man did not adhere to
the modern doctrines of communism. The communism of these early times was not a
mere theory or social doctrine; it was a simple and practical automatic
adjustment. Communism prevented pauperism and want; begging and prostitution
were almost unknown among these ancient tribes.

Primitive communism did not especially level men down, nor did it exalt
mediocrity, but it did put a premium on inactivity and idleness, and it did
stifle industry and destroy ambition. Communism was indispensable scaffolding
in the growth of primitive society, but it gave way to the evolution of a
higher social order because it ran counter to four strong human proclivities:

1. The family. Man not only craves to accumulate property; he desires to
bequeath his capital goods to his progeny. But in early communal society a
man's capital was either immediately consumed or distributed among the group at
his death. There was no inheritance of property--the inheritance tax was one
hundred per cent. The later capital-accumulation and property-inheritance mores
were a distinct social advance. And this is true notwithstanding the subsequent
gross abuses attendant upon the misuse of capital.

2. Religious tendencies. Primitive man also wanted to save up property as a
nucleus for starting life in the next existence. This motive explains why it
was so long the custom to bury a man's personal belongings with him. The
ancients believed that only the rich survived death with any immediate pleasure
and dignity. The teachers of revealed religion, more especially the Christian
teachers, were the first to proclaim that the poor could have salvation on
equal terms with the rich.

3. The desire for liberty and leisure. In the earlier days of social evolution
the apportionment of individual earnings among the group was virtually a form
of slavery; the worker was made slave to the idler. This was the suicidal
weakness of communism: The improvident habitually lived off the thrifty. Even
in modern times the improvident depend on the state (thrifty taxpayers) to take
care of them. Those who have no capital still expect those who have to feed
them.

4. The urge for security and power. Communism was finally destroyed by the
deceptive practices of progressive and successful individuals who resorted to

                               top of page - 781

diverse subterfuges in an effort to escape enslavement to the shiftless idlers
of their tribes. But at first all hoarding was secret; primitive insecurity
prevented the outward accumulation of capital. And even at a later time it was
most dangerous to amass too much wealth; the king would be sure to trump up
some charge for confiscating a rich man's property, and when a wealthy man
died, the funeral was held up until the family donated a large sum to public
welfare or to the king, an inheritance tax.

In earliest times women were the property of the community, and the mother
dominated the family. The early chiefs owned all the land and were proprietors
of all the women; marriage required the consent of the tribal ruler. With the
passing of communism, women were held individually, and the father gradually
assumed domestic control. Thus the home had its beginning, and the prevailing
polygamous customs were gradually displaced by monogamy. (Polygamy is the
survival of the female-slavery element in marriage. Monogamy is the slave-free
ideal of the matchless association of one man and one woman in the exquisite
enterprise of home building, offspring rearing, mutual culture, and
self-improvement.)

At first, all property, including tools and weapons, was the common possession
of the tribe. Private property first consisted of all things personally
touched. If a stranger drank from a cup, the cup was henceforth his. Next, any
place where blood was shed became the property of the injured person or group.

Private property was thus originally respected because it was supposed to be
charged with some part of the owner's personality. Property honesty rested
safely on this type of superstition; no police were needed to guard personal
belongings. There was no stealing within the group, though men did not hesitate
to appropriate the goods of other tribes. Property relations did not end with
death; early, personal effects were burned, then buried with the dead, and
later, inherited by the surviving family or by the tribe.

The ornamental type of personal effects originated in the wearing of charms.
Vanity plus ghost fear led early man to resist all attempts to relieve him of
his favorite charms, such property being valued above necessities.

Sleeping space was one of man's earliest properties. Later, homesites were
assigned by the tribal chiefs, who held all real estate in trust for the group.
Presently a fire site conferred ownership; and still later, a well constituted
title to the adjacent land.

Water holes and wells were among the first private possessions. The whole
fetish practice was utilized to guard water holes, wells, trees, crops, and
honey. Following the loss of faith in the fetish, laws were evolved to protect
private belongings. But game laws, the right to hunt, long preceded land laws.
The American red man never understood private ownership of land; he could not
comprehend the white man's view.

Private property was early marked by family insignia, and this is the early
origin of family crests. Real estate could also be put under the watchcare of
spirits. The priests would "consecrate" a piece of land, and it would then rest
under the protection of the magic taboos erected thereon. Owners thereof were
said to have a "priest's title." The Hebrews had great respect for these family
landmarks: "Cursed be he who removes his neighbor's landmark." These stone
markers bore the priest's initials. Even trees, when initialed, became private
property.

                               top of page - 782

In early days only the crops were private, but successive crops conferred
title; agriculture was thus the genesis of the private ownership of land.
Individuals were first given only a life tenureship; at death land reverted to
the tribe. The very first land titles granted by tribes to individuals were
graves--family burying grounds. In later times land belonged to those who
fenced it. But the cities always reserved certain lands for public pasturage
and for use in case of siege; these "commons" represent the survival of the
earlier form of collective ownership.

Eventually the state assigned property to the individual, reserving the right
of taxation. Having made secure their titles, landlords could collect rents,
and land became a source of income--capital. Finally land became truly
negotiable, with sales, transfers, mortgages, and foreclosures.

Private ownership brought increased liberty and enhanced stability; but private
ownership of land was given social sanction only after communal control and
direction had failed, and it was soon followed by a succession of slaves,
serfs, and landless classes. But improved machinery is gradually setting men
free from slavish toil.

The right to property is not absolute; it is purely social. But all government,
law, order, civil rights, social liberties, conventions, peace, and happiness,
as they are enjoyed by modern peoples, have grown up around the private
ownership of property.

The present social order is not necessarily right--not divine or sacred--but
mankind will do well to move slowly in making changes. That which you have is
vastly better than any system known to your ancestors. Make certain that when
you change the social order you change for the better. Do not be persuaded to
experiment with the discarded formulas of your forefathers. Go forward, not
backward! Let evolution proceed! Do not take a backward step.

[Presented by a Melchizedek of Nebadon.]

                               top of page - 783

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subjects Archive The Urantia Book Urantia Book PART III: The History of Urantia
 : The Origin Of Urantia Life Establishment On Urantia The Marine-life Era On
Urantia Urantia During The Early Land-life Era The Mammalian Era On Urantia The
Dawn Races Of Early Man The First Human Family The Evolutionary Races Of Color
  The Overcontrol Of Evolution The Planetary Prince Of Urantia The Planetary
 Rebellion The Dawn Of Civilization Primitive Human Institutions The Evolution
Of Human Government Development Of The State Government On A Neighboring Planet
 The Garden Of Eden Adam And Eve The Default Of Adam And Eve The Second Garden
The Midway Creatures The Violet Race After The Days Of Adam Andite Expansion In
The Orient Andite Expansion In The Occident Development Of Modern Civilization
The Evolution Of Marriage The Marriage Institution Marriage And Family Life The
   Origins Of Worship Early Evolution Of Religion The Ghost Cults Fetishes,
 Charms, And Magic Sin, Sacrifice, And Atonement Shamanism--medicine Men And
  Priests The Evolution Of Prayer The Later Evolution Of Religion Machiventa
 Melchizedek The Melchizedek Teachings In The Orient The Melchizedek Teachings
In The Levant Yahweh--god Of The Hebrews Evolution Of The God Concept Among The
   Hebrews The Melchizedek Teachings In The Occident The Social Problems Of
     Religion Religion In Human Experience The Real Nature Of Religion The
 Foundations Of Religious Faith The Reality Of Religious Experience Growth Of
 The Trinity Concept Deity And Reality Universe Levels Of Reality Origin And
Nature Of Thought Adjusters Mission And Ministry Of Thought Adjusters Relation
Of Adjusters To Universe Creatures Relation Of Adjusters To Individual Mortals
 The Adjuster And The Soul Personality Survival Seraphic Guardians Of Destiny
 Seraphic Planetary Government The Supreme Being The Almighty Supreme God The
 Supreme Supreme And Ultimate--time And Space The Bestowals Of Christ Michael

������������������������������������������������������������������������������Ŀ
�        //        �                   �                   �        �          �
�   The Dawn Of    �   The Evolution   �   Urantia Book    � Search � SiteMap! �
�      Civ...      �       O...        �       PA...       �        �          �
����������������������������������������������������������������������������
//

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
������������������������������������������������������������������������������Ŀ
�  �  �  �  �  �  �           SPIRITWEB ORG ([email protected]),           �  �
�  �  �  �  �  �  �                http://www.spiritweb.org                 �  �
�  �  �  �  �  �  �           Webmaster <[email protected]>           �  �
�  �  �  �  �  �  �                                                         �  �
�  �  �  �  �  �  �      ONLINE SINCE 1993. MAINTAINED IN SWITZERLAND.      �  �
�  �  �  �  �  �  � DISTRIBUTED TO CALIFORNIA, SPAIN, ITALY, SOUTH AFRICA,  �  �
�  �  �  �  �  �  �                        AUSTRALIA                        �  �
�  �  �  �  �  �  �                                                         �  �
�������������������������������������������������������������������������