As Important As Fire

How the steam engine profoundly changed human psychology

Allan Milne Lees
15 min readAug 7, 2024
Image credit: Gov.UK

Although we live in an age of astonishingly rapid technological change, for most of our evolutionary history the pace of change was glacial at best. If we could by means of some time machine go back 300,000 years and pluck a small group of humans out of their era and shift them forward fifty-fold more years than those that separate us from the days of the Roman Empire, those humans would likely notice no differences at all in the technologies their new neighbors were using, nor in their forms of social organization.

This is because the most fundamental change in human history was already long in the past by 300,000 BCE. As best as we can tell from archeological evidence, humans more-or-less mastered fire around 1.7 million years ago. This was some 1.4 million years before our hypothetical group of time-traveling humans were born and so the psychological impact of controlling fire was already firmly embedded in the human brain.

It’s difficult for us living in our modern world to grasp just how precariously our ancestors lived. Humans don’t have strong muscles, powerful jaws, sharp claws, or a surface resilient to tears and penetrations. We aren’t quick and we aren’t large relative to the many species that regarded our ancestors as potential meals. Mastery of fire…

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Allan Milne Lees

Anyone who enjoys my articles here on Medium may be interested in my books Why Democracy Failed and The Praying Ape, both available from Amazon.