Zum Hauptinhalt springen Zur Suche springen Zur Hauptnavigation springen
Herzlich Willkommen!
Banks are generally considered to be utilities that allow for the transmission of value on a daily basis in modern society, but they also seem to create devastating events like credit crises by the manufacture of credit. How this power originated in human society is of interest. Most animals produce some degree of savings, either in caching from one season to the next or for later in one season. Often these savings are an intergenerational transfer for the initial survival of young as in some wasps, or in a later use by the same individual who produces the savings either in the same year or the next as in many birds. The evolution of the bank, of institutions for organizing the savings of groups of humans has had a number of separate points of origin in history in various societies in antiquity and most recently during the Middle Ages in Europe. The history of banking illuminates the nature of contemporary fears about banks. Why banks are seen as necessary and deserving of saving or protecting during economic crises often seems a matter of faith or dogma than of necessity. This is why neither Bush nor Obamäs advisors, nor the EU have crafted as bold actions as FDR.
About the Author He graduated from UC Berkeley in 1970 in Anthropology, studied under J.Desmond Clark at the Lowie Museum, His work published in scientific journals includes Nature and Radiocarbon , HOMO on mitochondrial DNA and human evolution, Evolutionary Anthropology, and Ancient Biomolecules.