I'll try to remember to tag you if/when I put up a post about this. I think it happens both ways. Large conglomerations of people...
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Replying to @InaneImperium @380kmh
... REQUIRE long-distance trade of some type. Cities are very rarely self-supporting wrt natural resources, but conversely provide--
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Replying to @InaneImperium @380kmh
...irresistible markets to anyone with a surplus that can't be liquidated in a sparsely populated rural economy.
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Replying to @InaneImperium
yes, this is how they work cities are founded on, and live and die by, trade--inherently commercial
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Replying to @380kmh
Great, glad we agree. But nb even where, say, Puritans found Boston just for defense/administration/fishing, trade comes anyway.
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Replying to @InaneImperium
right--but notice how many cities founded for defense/admin never become *cities* in that sense? a lot just stay tiny
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Replying to @380kmh
Causally speaking, size/density of cities ca be driven (often) by stochastic processes. If they get big, pressures for trade are big
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Replying to @InaneImperium
you should definitely check out "The Economy of Cities" by Jane Jacobs
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Replying to @380kmh
I actually have "Life and Death" on my reading list. Btw, have you read "Darwinian Reactionary" essays on diversity/bio-semantics?
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Replying to @InaneImperium
I would skip Death and Life if I were you, literally all of her other books are more worthwhile
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But no, I don't think I've read Darwinian Reactionary's essays
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