Before Organisations: From Stone Age Tribes to a Fragmented World | Peter Garrett
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概要
💬 Our Stone Age ancestors lived for hundreds of thousands of years without organisations. Just small tribes of 20-40 people. But now organisations run every part of our world, from the clothes we wear to the water we drink.
⚡ So have we lost something by allowing faceless organisations to take over? Peter Garrett, author of A New Kind of Dialogue, argues organisations have created a fragmented experience of life, shifting what it means to be human.
In this episode we examine daily life as a Stone Age person, organised through families, tribes, kinship and trust. And we compare it with the modern day - the “age of organisations” - where artificial entities make all the decisions, and life has grown more complex than ever.
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🎧 Stay tuned to learn about:
➡ How Peter’s first-hand experience growing up in the African bush has shaped his views
➡ How daily life might have looked for a Stone Age person
➡ Why organisations have even reshaped our relationship with time itself
➡ Peter’s theory of “fragmentation” - and what systems are robbing from us
➡ Why organisations cause more problems than they solve
About the podcast:
What We Did Before is a podcast exploring the history of everyday life, from how we kept food fresh before fridges, to how we survived without shoes and what came before AI.
About your host:
Ollie Guillou is an award-winning podcast producer and broadcaster. He's co-founder of OG Podcasts, working with the likes of New Scientist, Dr Karan and Lessons From Our Mothers.
Connect with Ollie:
Website: www.ogpodcasts.co.uk
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ollie-guillou
Email: hello@ogpodcasts.co.uk