Previous Next Title Page Index Contents Site Index

7. Conclusion

I would have never thought that the study of the pre-history of writing was so much fun. My own opinion on the gyn-xyz theories of ancient societies, and their countertheories, is that both are right, in a way. The gyn-xyz theoreticians are right in the assumption that there existed civilized (ie. of complex social structure) ancient societies were not {patrist / patriarchic} and the counter-gyn-xyz theories are also right, in that it is nonsense to speak of a matrist society. Since the connotations of the terms matristic and matriarchic are just a negative mirror image of a patrist concept that Bachofen (as arch-patrist, and patrician, Röder 1996: 25, 19-30, 106) had projected onto ancient societies, and that served to confuse the issue and its protagonists ever since. To speak of the societal status and power function of women only as a mothers of children (and heads of a family), is already a quite patriarchic [94] social mode of thought. In my view, there is at least a theoretical possibility [95], that there was a highly developed and sophisticated cultural substrate in the ancient societies of Old Europe (or better, ancient EurAsia), which extended to include the cultural sphere of Chatal Hüyük and Hacilar (as reported by Mellaart), that indeed gives us a possibility for an alternative to think of a future society that transcends the matrist / patrist polarity. In the present societal and political situation on this globe, it may be interesting but not very useful, to find out that there may have been a society of an alternative societal organization in the conditions of ancient, neolithic humanity. What we need now is a workable projection for a future humanity that avoids the the more scandalous and destructive pitfalls of past societal organization. So we can use the conclusions drawn by Riane Eisler in her works and put them on a different base, as I am sketching here, and work from there to conceptions of more workable, and more agreeable future societies. It may be a personal preference that need not be shared by all people on this planet, if we can interpret the view of Riane Eisler in: "Sacred pleasure", of sacraments that are the more sacramental, the more pleasure they bring. This is quite a sacrilege by present-day moral and religious standards. (The standards of present-day societies are more governed by the puritan moral code: you can do anything you want, as long as you don't enjoy it).


[94] or as I used the term before: phallogocratic.
[95] which we may never be able to prove in a positive way

Previous Next Title Page Index Contents Site Index