AGE OF STEEL AND
FIRE
Leviathan has been
maturing like an organism these last few thousand years – just not uniformly in
all parts of its body. Different pockets of the human race have advanced at
different paces, though in modern times uniformity has been spreading, thanks
to the unifying power of technology. I divide the stages of advancement
according to the evolving modes of transport that characterized migration and
colonization, the two principles that play the largest roles in Leviathan’s
maturation. It’s by studying these stages that we open the mental door to what
I call Hyperborea.
The first stage of
migration and colonization was the Age of Hoof and Grass. The hooves in question
were of course on the feet of horses and oxen, which got their energy to move
by eating the grass they found on the way. Examples of such migrations were the
Mongol invasions of present-day Iran, Iraq, the Caucasus, and parts of Syria
and Turkey; the Proto-Indo-European migration westward from the Pontic steppe in
present-day Ukraine and Russia; and the Teutonic and Celtic “barbarian”
invasions that swept across Europe during the days of the Roman Empire.
The second stage of
migration and colonization was the Age of Wood and Wind. The wood in question
was used in the making of great ocean-going ships, which got their energy to
move primarily from the blowing wind. These migrations were westward from the
various nations of Europe, across the Atlantic ocean to the shores of North and
South America and nearby islands, or else south from the various nations of
Europe, down into Africa, and sometimes back north again along Africa’s other
coast, sailing both the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
The third stage of migration and colonization – the one in which Western Man currently finds itself – is the Age of Steel and Fire. The steel in question is used in the making of modern vehicles, all of which are (and always have been) powered by fire, be it in coal furnaces (heating water into steam) or in the carburetors of internal combustion engines, or still more advanced technologies, such as nuclear, in military ships, icebreakers, and submarines. The iconic migration via steel and fire was the building of railroads, either across the United States or across Europe. Some think the mass production of pistols and rifles defeated the American Indian, or else maybe small pox and other microbes, and these of course played major roles - but also key was the locomotive, which brought more white men out west than the indigenous tribes could hope to contend with (especially after the ravages of European germs).
Today the most
iconic steel and fire transport is the airplane, by which man can cross oceans
in hours. But this mode of transport will one day be eclipsed by something
still greater: the rocket ship. Today, the Age of Steel and Fire has yet to
express its full potential. Trains, cars, trucks, and airplanes cross
continents, yes, and jets, ocean liners, and oil tankers cross oceans, but
continents have been crossed since the Age of Hoof and Grass, and oceans since
the Age of Wood and Wind. The frontier that only steel and fire can cross is
cislunar and interplanetary space. Man has sent expeditions out into this great
expanse but has not yet built settlements on lunar or Martian territory. The
day for that is rapidly approaching. I hope to see it in my lifetime and have a
reasonable shot at doing so.
Reading at length on
the foregoing and deeply contemplating it will open your mental door to Hyperborea should you care to join me there. ISCHYROS DIAVOLOS!

The Wall