From Nick Szabo's Unenumerated blog:
Before book    consciousness there had been no national languages, but only a range of    often mutually incomprehensible dialects and in Western Europe the    language of the tiny literate elite, Latin. With newly unified national    vernaculars, organizations were able to coordinate and grow in an    unprecedented manner. A much larger group of people, raised on the same    written language, increasingly also came to look and speak similarly and    become far more mutually trusted. It was the birth of national loyalty    and nationwide webs of trust. The "tribe" to which we are instinctively    loyal vastly increased in size. 
   
   The pool of already somewhat trusted "same tribe" people from which a    bureaucracy could recruit new members vastly increased. National    polities and militaries were able to coordinate political, economic, and    battlefield strategies in an unprecedented manner. The 16th century saw    the first major growth of the      joint-stock corporation, enabling far more capital to be invested in    the enlarging organizations that engaged in mining and manufacture as    well as government and conquest. This development is probably a response    to the new ability to form larger organizations, since the basic ideas    (corporate law, shares of stock, etc.) had already been in use in Europe    for quite some time. 
Going along with    this was the emergence of "national bards," beginning with Dante, who    made the Florentine dialect the national version of Italian.
  
  Europe ended up with a bunch of mid-sized nation states united by    language, which proved about the right size for many tasks. Unfortunately,    Europe's nation-states proved most effective of all at self-sacrificial    war, and mutually exhausted themselves in WWI, discrediting nationalism,    which had otherwise proved the most effective framework for human    progress. (Similarly, the Chinese progressed the fastest during the    Warring States era, which ended with the formation of the Empire 2200    years ago.)  
  
  In contrast, the Arab world shunned printing presses for hundreds of    years. And, due to the sacred nature of the Arab language, the rise of    national languages was largely prevented. So, the Arabs didn't really    develop the nation-state. The pan-Arab or pan-Islamic caliphate remained    attractive in theory, while, in reality, tribal and family struggles    occupied their energies. 
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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