Dimensions
162 x 240 x 32mm
We live in an age ruled by merchants, and until recently it seemed to us self-evident that their free-market imperatives were the ones that mattered. Competition, flexibility and profit are still the common currency, even at a time when Western countries have been driven off a cliff by these very values. But will it always be this way?
Merchant, Soldier, Sage is a remarkable book that proposes a radical new approach to how we see ourselves. David Priestland argues for the predominance in any society of one of three broad value systems - that of the merchant (commercial and competitive); the soldier (aristocratic and militaristic); and the sage (bureaucratic or 'priestly').
These 'castes' struggle alongside the worker (egalitarian and artisanal) for power, and when they achieve supremacy, they can have such a strong hold over us that it is almost impossible to imagine life outside their grip. And yet there come a point of drastic change, usually because one caste becomes too dominant. The result is economic crisis, war or revolution, and eventually a new caste takes over.