Did alcohol facilitate the evolution of complex societies?
Abstract The size and complexity of human societies increased dramatically over the Holocene. Researchers have proposed a variety of potential drivers of this major transition, including our predilection for alcoholic beverages. This “drunk” hypothesis argues that drinking alcohol facilitated the ri...
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
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Springer Nature
2025-07-01
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| Series: | Humanities & Social Sciences Communications |
| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-05503-6 |
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| author | Václav Hrnčíř Angela M. Chira Russell D. Gray |
| author_facet | Václav Hrnčíř Angela M. Chira Russell D. Gray |
| author_sort | Václav Hrnčíř |
| collection | DOAJ |
| description | Abstract The size and complexity of human societies increased dramatically over the Holocene. Researchers have proposed a variety of potential drivers of this major transition, including our predilection for alcoholic beverages. This “drunk” hypothesis argues that drinking alcohol facilitated the rise of complex societies because it promotes social bonding, increases cooperation, and enhances human creativity. At the political level, alcohol-driven feasting serves to build alliances, mobilise labour, and implement power and authority. However, systematic cross-cultural evidence for the claim is lacking. Here we test this hypothesis with a global sample of 186 largely non-industrial societies, purpose-built dataset on intoxicants and causal inference methods. We find a positive relationship between the presence of indigenous alcoholic beverages and higher levels of political complexity, measured by the number of administrative levels. The effect (albeit modest) holds even after controlling for several potential confounders, including common ancestry, spatial proximity, environmental productivity, and agricultural intensity. Our results support the idea that the group-level social benefits of traditional non-distilled fermented beverages may outweigh their disruptive effects, and that alcohol may have facilitated the evolution of human societies. However, other contributing factors, such as agriculture or religion, were probably more effective drivers than getting drunk. |
| format | Article |
| id | doaj-art-420185e29a4e4c988ce4e0ffd7a0dbbd |
| institution | Kabale University |
| issn | 2662-9992 |
| language | English |
| publishDate | 2025-07-01 |
| publisher | Springer Nature |
| record_format | Article |
| series | Humanities & Social Sciences Communications |
| spelling | doaj-art-420185e29a4e4c988ce4e0ffd7a0dbbd2025-08-20T04:01:52ZengSpringer NatureHumanities & Social Sciences Communications2662-99922025-07-0112111310.1057/s41599-025-05503-6Did alcohol facilitate the evolution of complex societies?Václav Hrnčíř0Angela M. Chira1Russell D. Gray2Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary AnthropologyMax Planck Institute for Evolutionary AnthropologyMax Planck Institute for Evolutionary AnthropologyAbstract The size and complexity of human societies increased dramatically over the Holocene. Researchers have proposed a variety of potential drivers of this major transition, including our predilection for alcoholic beverages. This “drunk” hypothesis argues that drinking alcohol facilitated the rise of complex societies because it promotes social bonding, increases cooperation, and enhances human creativity. At the political level, alcohol-driven feasting serves to build alliances, mobilise labour, and implement power and authority. However, systematic cross-cultural evidence for the claim is lacking. Here we test this hypothesis with a global sample of 186 largely non-industrial societies, purpose-built dataset on intoxicants and causal inference methods. We find a positive relationship between the presence of indigenous alcoholic beverages and higher levels of political complexity, measured by the number of administrative levels. The effect (albeit modest) holds even after controlling for several potential confounders, including common ancestry, spatial proximity, environmental productivity, and agricultural intensity. Our results support the idea that the group-level social benefits of traditional non-distilled fermented beverages may outweigh their disruptive effects, and that alcohol may have facilitated the evolution of human societies. However, other contributing factors, such as agriculture or religion, were probably more effective drivers than getting drunk.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-05503-6 |
| spellingShingle | Václav Hrnčíř Angela M. Chira Russell D. Gray Did alcohol facilitate the evolution of complex societies? Humanities & Social Sciences Communications |
| title | Did alcohol facilitate the evolution of complex societies? |
| title_full | Did alcohol facilitate the evolution of complex societies? |
| title_fullStr | Did alcohol facilitate the evolution of complex societies? |
| title_full_unstemmed | Did alcohol facilitate the evolution of complex societies? |
| title_short | Did alcohol facilitate the evolution of complex societies? |
| title_sort | did alcohol facilitate the evolution of complex societies |
| url | https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-025-05503-6 |
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