Primitive Mentality, Modern Civilization and The Fate of Anthropology: A Conversation With Professor Christopher Hallpike
Primitive Mentality, Modern Civilization and The Fate of Anthropology: A Conversation With Professor Christopher Hallpike
Primitive Mentality, Modern Civilization and The Fate of Anthropology: A Conversation With Professor Christopher Hallpike
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10.51845/34.4.12
DOI 10.51845/34.4.12
Articles
Geoffrey Clarfield
Geoffrey Clarfield is a musician and anthropologist who spent seventeen years travelling, living and
working in East Africa; [email protected]. He was Director of Ethnography and
Special projects at the National Museums of Kenya, after which he worked for the Rockefeller Foundation
in Nairobi. Clarfield was the executive producer and narrator for the documentary film about central Tan-
zania “Facing Mount Hanang” and recorded with the late Tanzanian singer songwriter Ndala Kasheba. He
has also written numerous articles about Africa for a variety of newspapers and magazines.
52 A Conversation with Professor Christopher Hallpike
A second and related question was, “How did we become modern and what
of it?” That is to say, how did we break with the lifestyle and worldview of our
medieval forebears and enter the modern world of science with its uniquely
Western desire to understand our own society and culture and those of others.
While so many scholars and thinkers felt that the study of the remnant
societies of the “underdeveloped world” was a side show of a side show, it was
not. That is because in order to understand who we are we have to gain a better
understanding of where we come from: ancient and prehistoric societies sim-
ilar to those still tribal and marginal societies that survive in the “developing
world.”
Until the nineteenth and twentieth centuries academic historians did not
seriously engage in these kinds of enquiries. If we could answer the question
of how we got here from there we would also hope that anthropologists could
come up with a definition of human nature, or at least a taxonomy of social and
cultural differences that could be ranked over time and space based on the mul-
tiplicity of field reports. A theory of cultural evolution could and should emerge
from this kind of inquiry.
Although some anthropologists have taken up this challenge it has become
complicated by anthropologists and “cultural ecologists,” scholars who have
applied Darwinian theory to the rise of society, from hunter gatherer to astro-
naut. Today, neo-Darwinism is a thriving business and has given rise to an
entire subfield of “evolutionary psychology,” whereby the round hole of human
behaviour across time and space is more often than not shoved into the square
hole of neo-Darwinian interpretations of society and culture.
This way of thinking also has its own public intellectuals, best selling
superstars such as Professors Jared Diamond in the U.S., Richard Dawkins in
the U.K. and now Yuval Noah Harari in Israel. But I am getting ahead of myself.
By my early twenties I was on a quest to understand society from two hope-
fully complementary perspectives; the social history of literate civilizations
(the West, Islam, the Hindu, Buddhist, and Confucian worlds) and the lifestyles
of their peasants and that of the non-literate peoples, many of whom survived in
marginal habitats and in the tropics, such as Sub-Saharan Africa. Disease had
delayed the ultimate conquest of these places and peoples by Western powers
until the late nineteenth century.
Simply put, I wanted to both experience and understand the differ-
ence between preindustrial and industrial societies, socially, cultural, and
A Conversation with Professor Christopher Hallpike 53
and thought differently than moderns do and whose discredited writings, based
on fine nineteenth century ethnographers, I read in graduate school.
Because I was studying an East African Cushitic speaking people I had
read articles by a British anthropologist, Christopher Hallpike, who had done
field work among the Konso, a Cushitic people who live north of the Rendille
in southern Ethiopia. He had later written a book called The Foundations of
Primitive Thought (1979). In 1986 I lost a friend in Kenya, a fellow anthropologist,
when I lent her a copy of this book. She told me with great passion that the book
was “racist”!
Hallpike’s book is a refutation of Levi Strauss’s The Savage Mind and in many
ways resonates with the conclusions of Levy-Bruhl. Having read most of the
anthropological literature, both British and American, concerning non-indus-
trial peoples, their customs, institutions, and thought patterns, Hallpike, going
against the grain, argues that there is a fundamental difference between primi-
tive peoples and moderns.
Hallpike says that non-industrial, tribal peoples may have wisdom based
on life experience but, overall, they live in what Piaget calls a “preoperational
world of thought” where magical thinking predominates (what Levy Bruhl once
called “participation”). For a deeper appreciation of this book, I recommend the
review by David Hick’s written in 1981.1
The Foundations of Primitive Thought is an enlightening and glorious read
for those who have swum in the anthropological literature for decades. It is a
work that has not only been ignored by mainstream anthropology but vilified
because of its political incorrectness.
Today, as we watch the “woke” decline of cultural and social anthropology
in the universities of North America and the United Kingdom, non-Western
people and their cultures are now often considered to be superior to the West
with its so called white, male, phallocentric, imperialist, oppressive world view,
whose offspring--capitalism, and Western science--still wreak havoc on the
world of primitive peoples. The original sin of its slave owning ancestors is now
replicated on the passive victims of the “third world.”
To argue, as Hallpike has and does, that there is something worthwhile
about modernity, science, and democracy has now become heretical among
present day anthropologists.
1 David Hicks, “Comptes Rendu,” L’Homme XXI, no. 1 (Jan-Mar, 1981): 121-141.
A Conversation with Professor Christopher Hallpike 55
Interview
GC: What has happened to social and cultural anthropology during the last
twenty to thirty years?
CH: It has gone down hill. There is little intellectual honesty or philosophical
rigor although here and there people do some good work. This is because there
has been a change in the political and cultural climate we now live in. With the
2 Christopher Hallpike, Darwinism, Dogma and Cultural Evolution (Castalia House, 2020).
3 Christopher Hallpike, Ship of Fools: An Anthology of Learned Nonsense about Primitive Society (Castalia
House, 2018).
4 Christopher Hallpike, How We Got Here: From Bows and Arrows to the Space Age (AuthorHouse, 2008).
56 A Conversation with Professor Christopher Hallpike
final end of colonialism there has been a parallel rejection of Western civilization
and its achievements. Today the kind of ethnography and comparative work
that I engage in, as they say, is “out of fashion.” Anthropologists (or those who
now call themselves that) are against the disciplined study of cultural and
social differences, and attempt to deny that there is such a thing as primitive
society, or cultural evolution.
This is supported by a climate of intellectual and administrative cowardice
at the universities and funding committees. In the short space of a few decades
things have been turned upside down, a moral spinelessness and cowardice has
penetrated Britain and the West, even in the most conservative institutions
such as the Church of England to which I belong. Do not even ask me what I
think about today’s Archbishop!
For example, when I submitted my book on the evolution of morality the
reviewer at the Oxford University Press advised rejection because my ideas
were academically “unfashionable.” In this intellectual climate you can under-
stand that my writings on primitive mentality are hardly welcome in main-
stream anthropology.
GC: What is wrong with the work of Richard Dawkins, Jared Diamond and other
cultural materialists?
CH: They all suffer from one philosophical mistake. They believe, without
evidence, that almost all social and cultural phenomena are somehow a
reflection or expression of physical reality. They believe that this physical
reality is “more real” than concepts and beliefs and the creativity of the human
mind. They have overlooked the simple fact that humans have purposes and
face problems. They adhere to variants of a simple materialistic reductionism.
For example, the latest member to join this train is [Yuval Noah] Harari who
argues that conventions are fantasies and therefore all societies are based on
fictions. Any good lawyer can explain to him that these fictions are conventions,
expressions of tradition and history, and allow society to function, like the
provisions in a wedding contract.
GC: How can you describe and explain your developmental writings to an
intelligent layperson?
CH: The important thing to remember is that more often than not when
American cultural and British social or French “structural” anthropologists
A Conversation with Professor Christopher Hallpike 57
talk about mind or the mind of primitive man they are inventing it. I mean
they never refer to readings or theories that come from modern psychology, for
example Piaget.
I believe that Piaget provided a rich and clear framework or paradigm for
understanding the ethnographies of primitive peoples. His category of pre-op-
erational thought explains so much about the manner and style in which prim-
itives think and believe. It is the opposite of modern, academically and scientif-
ically trained men and women. In this sense Darwinian evolution and its theo-
ries do not apply. My understanding therefore of culture and cultural change is
interactionist.
GC: Does anthropology as you practised it have a future in England and North
America?
CH: Right now, it does not. It has become a form of undisciplined social activism
or extreme relativism. I suspect that traditional anthropology may survive
among the newly free universities in Central and Eastern Europe but that
remains to be seen.
GC: You appear to believe in modernity and Western civilization. What does
that mean to you, briefly or in essence?
CH: First of all, I am not an atheist which puts me at odds with so many of my
colleagues, and unsurprisingly I am also at odds with most other modern
streams of thought in anthropology as well. But I do push back as you can see
from my books, essays, and website. Perhaps one day they will teach me [i.e. my
work] in the universities again.
As a Christian I believe that there was and is much good in Christian
Western civilization. I am one of those who, when he sees the carnage and cor-
ruption that has characterized and continues to characterize so many former
British colonies and possessions, believes that “we left too soon.”
I know that this will grievously offend the “postcolonial” pundits of the
day but events keep on showing that they are wrong. In a place like southern
Ethiopia the spread of Christianity has allowed tribes that were once at daggers
drawn, to begin to learn to be tolerant citizens of the developing democratic
experiment that goes on in Ethiopia with its tragic fits and stops.
GC: Do you have any simple advice for young aspiring anthropologists?
CH: Yes. Read the classic ethnographies, the ones that are neither Marxist or
Darwinian and that are based on serious empiricism.
A Conversation with Professor Christopher Hallpike 59
CH: But first young students must reject postmodernism and its handmaidens.
These ideologies are destined to join the dustbin of history, just like the teachers
of Marxist-Leninist thought in former East Germany.
Life is short and it is better to get on with it!