The Òrga Spiral Podcasts

Poetry was humanity's original hard drive

Paul Anderson Season 11 Episode 18

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0:00 | 43:10

This conversation explores how ancient oral cultures used poetry as a survival technology long before writing existed. In "primary oral cultures," words existed only as fleeting sounds—when spoken, they vanished instantly. Without writing, societies faced a desperate challenge: how to preserve laws, navigation routes, agricultural cycles, and survival knowledge across generations.

The solution was poetry—specifically rhythm, rhyme, meter, and repetition. These weren't artistic flourishes but engineered "cognitive hacks" that functioned like error-checking mechanisms. Meter acted as a checksum, alerting performers when they'd made mistakes. The research on Milman Parry and Albert Lord's "oral formulaic theory" shows that poets like Homer didn't memorize fixed texts but improvised using pre-fabricated "Lego brick" phrases (like "rosy-fingered dawn") that fit specific metrical patterns.

Stunningly, this technology preserved real-world data for tens of thousands of years. Aboriginal Australian oral traditions accurately recorded volcanic eruptions from 34,000-40,000 years ago. Pacific Northwest Native American myths about the "Thunderbird and Whale" were precise accounts of a magnitude 9.0 earthquake and tsunami that struck on January 26, 1700.

The conversation traces how these poetic structures appear globally—from Vedic India's complex recitation systems (preserving 10,600 verses without writing) to the Quran's formulaic patterns designed for memorization. When writing emerged, it "ossified" these fluid oral traditions into fixed texts.

Today, we've returned to "secondary orality" through podcasts, spoken word poetry, and even acronyms like ROYGBIV—all still using the ancient cognitive technology that transforms information into memorable, emotionally resonant narrative. The question remains: as we outsource memory to AI and the cloud, what becomes of the human mind?

"Please comment "

SPEAKER_00

Imagine trying to remember every single law of your country, the entire geological history of your continent, and uh your family tree going back thirty generations.

SPEAKER_01

Right, which is basically impossible for us today.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. Now imagine doing all of that without a single piece of paper, no smartphones, no hard drives, no libraries at all.

SPEAKER_01

Just your brain.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, just your brain. If you forget a word, your civilization literally loses a piece of its history forever. So today we are looking at how our ancestors survived this nightmare by inventing humanity's original hard drive, which is, believe it or not, poetry.

SPEAKER_01

It's a really profound shift in perspective. I mean, when you think about it, we usually think of poetry as an art form, you know, something delicate or aesthetic.

SPEAKER_00

Like Shakespeare or something you study in high school.

SPEAKER_01

Right, exactly. But when you look at the origins of human language, you realize it was actually a highly engineered survival technology.

SPEAKER_00

Well, welcome to this deep dive. If you are joining us, you are probably exactly like us. You love pulling things apart to see how they actually work under the hood. And uh today's topic is massive.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it really is. We are sifting through an incredible stack of research today.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, we've got comparative philology papers, deep structural analyses of the Greek Iliad and the Indian Ramiana, plus uh archaeological records of Aboriginal oral histories.

SPEAKER_01

And text breaking down the raw mechanics of ancient memory from Mesopotamia, Egypt, and archaic Greece. It's a vast landscape of information.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Spanning tens of thousands of years and crossing every major continent, which is wild, but the through line is just unmistakable.

SPEAKER_01

It really is.

SPEAKER_00

So our mission today is to figure out what traits of ancient poetry have survived or evolved over millennia. But like, we're not doing a high school literature class here.

SPEAKER_01

No, not at all. We are treating this as an investigation into human cognition.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. How did early humans preserve life or death data before writing was invented? And how do those exact same poetic hacks still shape the way you speak, the way you remember things, and uh the way you tell stories today?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell To even begin to answer that, we have to perform a pretty radical mental reset. We have to imagine what the scholar Walter Ong famously called primary orality.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Okay, let's unpack this. Because the core mystery here is the idea that rhythm, rhyme, and repetition weren't invented just to sound pretty around a campfire.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Right. They were designed to hack the human brain.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So what exactly is primary orality?

SPEAKER_01

Well, primary orality refers to a culture that is completely and utterly untouched by any knowledge of writing or print.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Which is hard for us to even picture.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell It's very difficult for us to imagine. Yeah, because we live in a deeply literate culture. We see words everywhere.

SPEAKER_00

On signs on our phones, everywhere.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. But in a primary oral culture, words are not things you look at. They are strictly auditory events.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Right, because without text, a word only exists in the exact physical moment it is spoken.

SPEAKER_01

Think about the physics of it. If I say the word Apple, the word only exists while my breath is moving and my vocal cords are vibrating.

SPEAKER_00

Wow, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

The moment I stop speaking, the word is gone forever. It has dissipated into the air.

SPEAKER_00

You can't pause it.

SPEAKER_01

You cannot pause it, you cannot rewind it, and you certainly cannot look it up in a dictionary later.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell So if the mind is the only archive available and memory is the only database, you are constantly fighting against the biological reality of forgetting.

SPEAKER_01

You're fighting a losing battle against time, essentially.

SPEAKER_00

It's terrifying when you put it like that. I mean, if I want to remember something today, I write it down. If I don't write it down, it practically ceases to exist in my reality. Right. How on earth did early human societies manage to hold on to anything complex?

SPEAKER_01

Well, they had to engineer a solution to stabilize thought. A society just cannot function if its laws, its navigational routes, and its agricultural cycles disappear with the wind. That makes sense. But they ran into a major problem, which is that conversational language is incredibly fragile.

SPEAKER_00

Wait, hold on. Why is everyday conversation fragile? If they are talking to each other all day, couldn't they just pass the information down through regular storytelling?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Well, think about the mechanics of everyday conversation. It is fluid, meandering, and imprecise.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, that's true.

SPEAKER_01

If I tell you a story about what I did yesterday and then ask you to repeat it back to me verbatim tomorrow, you will fail.

SPEAKER_00

I definitely fail.

SPEAKER_01

You will capture the gist of it, sure, but you will swap out words, you'll change the pacing, and you'll drop details.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, I see. It's the telephone effect.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

You know the game where you whisper a phrase in someone's ear, and by the time it gets around the circle, the dog caught the ball turns into like the frog bought a doll.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Over a single afternoon, a message gets completely corrupted.

SPEAKER_00

So over 50 generations, that would be unrecognizable.

SPEAKER_01

Precisely. And if that message is how to find water in a drought, or uh which berries will kill you, you cannot afford the telephone effect.

SPEAKER_00

Oh wow, the stakes are way higher than a parlor game.

SPEAKER_01

You cannot rely on the gist. You need high fidelity transmission.

SPEAKER_00

The analogy that jumps out at me here is trying to remember a really long grocery list versus remembering the lyrics to a favorite song.

SPEAKER_01

I love that analogy.

SPEAKER_00

Because if my spouse gives me a list of 20 things to buy at the store and I don't write it down, I am definitely coming home with the wrong brand of cereal.

SPEAKER_01

And you will completely forget the milk.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. But if a song I haven't heard since high school comes on the radio, I instantly know every single word, the exact inflection, the timing, everything.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. And let's dig into why you remember that song. It isn't because you have a supernatural memory for, you know, 90s pop music.

SPEAKER_00

Sadly, you do not.

SPEAKER_01

It is because the song is structured to prevent you from coming home with the wrong serial. Ancient bards and priests essentially turned the grocery list of human knowledge into a song.

SPEAKER_00

So they used rhythm, rhyme, alliteration, and strictly fixed syllable counts.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

So these poetic devices were internal error checking mechanisms.

SPEAKER_01

Think of it like a checksum in computer science.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, that's a cool way to look at it.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. In programming, a checksum is an algorithm that scans a block of data to detect errors introduced during transmission. Yeah. Meter and rhyme do the exact same thing for the human brain.

SPEAKER_00

So if a verse is composed in a strict meter, let's say, it requires exactly 12 syllables with a specific pattern of stressed and unstressed beats.

SPEAKER_01

Right. And if the performer forgets a word or substitutes a word with the wrong rhythm, the beat breaks.

SPEAKER_00

The physical sensation of the rhythm falling apart alerts the speaker that they've made a mistake.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

The beat drops, and everyone in the tribe knows there's a bug in the code.

SPEAKER_01

It literally forces recovery. You know that feeling when you're singing along to a song and you substitute a two-syllable word where a three-syllable word belongs?

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Yeah, you physically stumble over the words.

SPEAKER_01

You do. The architecture of the verse corrects you. And this architectural constraint drastically shaped the language of oral cultures.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell In what way?

SPEAKER_01

Well, research shows their vocabularies were often smaller than ours. Perhaps around 5,000 words compared to the hundreds of thousands in modern dictionaries.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell But smaller doesn't mean less sophisticated, right?

SPEAKER_01

Not at all. It just means their words were anchored in incredibly concrete, shared, existential experiences.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Because they couldn't just look up an abstract word.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Exactly. They didn't have abstract philosophical dictionary definitions because they didn't have dictionaries. A word meant exactly what it did in the context of the physical world and the poetic tradition.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Okay, so if the mind is the archive and poetry is the specific file format designed to store data safely. Right. What do the actual files look like? If we crack open the hard drive of the ancient mind, what are the literal building blocks holding this data together?

SPEAKER_01

To answer that, we have to look at one of the most groundbreaking literary discoveries of the 20th century. It brings us to the oral formulaic theory.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, this is the work of Milman Perry and Albert Lorde. Looking at their research, it seems like they completely demolished how we understand ancient epic poetry.

SPEAKER_01

Especially the Greeks, yeah. They solved what was known as the Homeric question.

SPEAKER_00

The Homeric question.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, for centuries, classical scholars sat in their armchairs and debated the origins of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Who was Homer? Was he a single blind genius who miraculously dictated 15,000 lines of perfect poetry?

SPEAKER_00

Which sounds impossible.

SPEAKER_01

Or was it a committee of writers? How could any human being compose and memorize something so massive and intricate without writing it down?

SPEAKER_00

And Perry and Lorde realized that you can't solve an ancient oral mystery by looking at books in a modern library.

SPEAKER_01

Right. So in the 1930s, they traveled to the Balkans, specifically Yugoslavia, to study the local guslari.

SPEAKER_00

Who were they?

SPEAKER_01

These were traditional, illiterate singers who played a one-stringed instrument called a gusle, and they could perform massive epic poems purely from memory. Wow. They would sing for hours and hours night after night.

SPEAKER_00

So they basically found living, breathing homers.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, they did. And by studying these living performers, recording them and interviewing them, Perry and Lorde cracked the code.

SPEAKER_00

What did they find out?

SPEAKER_01

They realized that these ancient epic singers didn't memorize fixed static texts word for word. It wasn't like a stage actor memorizing Hamlet.

SPEAKER_00

Which would be impossible anyway. You can't just memorize 15,000 lines of prose perfectly.

SPEAKER_01

You really can't. Instead, they discovered that these bards composed extemporaneously in the actual moment in performance by relying on what Perry defined as the formula.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. The formal definition of a formula from the research is uh a group of words regularly employed under the same metrical conditions to express a given idea.

SPEAKER_01

Right. But practically speaking, these are essentially a storehouse of ready-made building blocks.

SPEAKER_00

They are the Lego bricks of language.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. An oral poet would have a vast internalized mental inventory of these pre-measured, pre-rhymed phrases that were guaranteed to fit perfectly into the meter of the poem.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell And we see this all the time in Iliad and the Odyssey. Anyone who had to read Homer in school probably remembers getting a little annoyed by those repeating phrases.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

It's never just the dawn. It's always the rosy finger dawn. It's never just the sea, it's the wine dark sea.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell And Achilles is always swift-footed Achilles, even when he's just sitting in a tent doing absolutely nothing.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Yeah, that always confused me. And for a long time, Victorian scholars thought Homer was just being lazy, right? Like he was repeating cliches.

SPEAKER_01

Right. But Perry proved that these epithets are highly functional pieces of technology. Greek epics are sung in a very strict meter called dactylic hexameter.

SPEAKER_00

What does that sound like?

SPEAKER_01

It has a very specific galloping rhythm. Think of it as damn diddy, dm diddy.

SPEAKER_00

So six beans per line.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. When the Greek bard is singing live, maintaining this rapid, relentless galloping rhythm, and he needs to end a line describing the morning, he can't pause to think of a unique metaphor.

SPEAKER_00

That would break the beat.

SPEAKER_01

Right. So rosy fingered darn is a prefabricated formula that fits the exact rhythmic slot at the end of the hexameter line. Using it gives his brain a microsecond of rest to plan the next line without stopping the song.

SPEAKER_00

That is brilliant. It's an automated cognitive subroutine.

SPEAKER_01

That's a great way to put it.

SPEAKER_00

But what blows my mind is that you see this exact same code running on the other side of the planet. Like look at the ancient Indian epics.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, the comparative analysis between the Greek tradition and the Sanskrit Ramayana by Valmiki is staggering.

SPEAKER_00

It's practically the same system.

SPEAKER_01

It proves that this formulaic structuralism transcends geography. It is a fundamental property of the human brain, not just some Greek invention.

SPEAKER_00

Ramayani uses the exact same technology. For example, the hero, Lord Rama, is repeatedly referred to as Mariata Purushutama, which translates to the best among those who uphold righteousness.

SPEAKER_01

It operates exactly like the swift-footed Achilles epithet.

SPEAKER_00

Just a plug-and-play block.

SPEAKER_01

Right. It is a formulaic expression that serves as a consistent, metrically perfect way to fill a rhythmic gap while reinforcing his virtuous character to the audience.

SPEAKER_00

There was another example in the research, too.

SPEAKER_01

Another brilliant example is found in the Sundara Khanda section of the Ramayana, during the story of Hanuman's massive oceanic leap to Lanka. Okay. The text repeatedly employs the rhythmic refrain Vimarupadari Asura Samhari, meaning bearer of a formidable form, destroyer of demons.

SPEAKER_00

But wait, doesn't that mean the poet is kind of a hack?

SPEAKER_01

How so?

SPEAKER_00

Well, if they're just reusing the exact same phrases over and over, plugging in wine dark sea here and Mariata Prushadama there to keep the beat going. I mean, it sounds like they're just playing ancient mad libs. Where is the actual creativity?

SPEAKER_01

That is the most common misconception modern readers have, but the reality requires a totally different understanding of creativity.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, I'm listening.

SPEAKER_01

The genius of the oral poet does not lie in inventing new words. It lies in the improvisation and the structural assembly of the narrative.

SPEAKER_00

Improvisation, but they're telling the same story.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, they're telling the same core story, yes, but every single performance is entirely unique.

SPEAKER_00

Really?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. The poet uses these formulas as substitution slots to maintain the flow, but the wider framework of the story is fluid. The bard is reading the room.

SPEAKER_00

Like a stand-up comedian.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. If the crowd around the fire is leaning in, thrilled by a combat scene, the bard can pull from his mental storehouse of battle formulas to extend the fight scene for another 30 minutes.

SPEAKER_00

Just generating more content on the fly.

SPEAKER_01

Right. He can plug in different descriptions of armor breaking, swords clashing, and chariots turning. If he senses the audience is getting restless or tired, he can seamlessly deploy a transition formula and move the plot forward.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, I see. It's not mad libs at all. It's jazz.

SPEAKER_01

It is exactly like a jazz musician. A jazz saxophonist isn't inventing new notes on the stage. They are working within a very strict established chord progression, that is the overarching meter, and they have musical phrases or licks they've practiced thousands of times in all 12 keys.

SPEAKER_00

And those are the formulas.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. But the brilliance of someone like John Coltrane or Miles Davis is how they assemble those licks in real time, responding to the drummer, the bassist, and the energy of the crowd.

SPEAKER_00

So the oral poet is a linguistic jazz improviser.

SPEAKER_01

Perfectly said.

SPEAKER_00

That perfectly explains how they can go on for hours. These Lego bricks are incredibly effective tools for thinking on your feet.

SPEAKER_01

They really are.

SPEAKER_00

But a pile of bricks isn't enough. You know, if I'm standing in front of an audience for four hours trying to remember a massive epic, I'd still lose my place in the larger narrative. Sure. Need a blueprint. How did ancient poets string these formulas into cohesive narratives that didn't just uh collapse under their own weight?

SPEAKER_01

That brings us to the architecture of the poems themselves and a structural concept known as parallelism.

SPEAKER_00

Parallelism. The research describes this as arguably the most pervasive structural feature of ancient verse across the entire globe.

SPEAKER_01

It is completely ubiquitous. You will find it in the Hebrew Psalms, in ancient Mayan texts, in Sumerian litanies, in Egyptian funerary spells.

SPEAKER_00

So everywhere.

SPEAKER_01

Everywhere. Parallelism is, at its core, the pairing of concepts, phrases, or syntax. It acts as a mental scaffold for both the performer and the listener.

SPEAKER_00

How does it help the performer?

SPEAKER_01

Well, if the singer somehow forgets the exact wording of line one, the synonymous or complementary nature of line two provides a psychological cue for recovery. It is a built-in safety net.

SPEAKER_00

Can you give us a concrete example? How does this actually sound in practice?

SPEAKER_01

The Hebrew Psalms are a perfect example. A line might say, Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.

SPEAKER_00

Ah, okay.

SPEAKER_01

The second half of the pairing doesn't advance the plot, it just restates the first half using complementary imagery. The structure itself holds the meaning in place.

SPEAKER_00

But the execution of parallelism looks very different depending on the culture, doesn't it?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

Right, because the contrast between the Chinese tradition and the Mayan tradition is really fascinating.

SPEAKER_01

Let's look at the Chinese Xi's style of poetry, particularly from the classic of poetry, or the Xijing, which dates back nearly 3,000 years. Okay. In this tradition, we see parallelism executed with exact verbal repetition. The poet will use identical words in parallel matching lines.

SPEAKER_00

It's interesting because the text notes that disallowing verbal repetition within a poem actually became a strict rule much later.

SPEAKER_01

Right, during the Tang Dynasty.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, to distinguish old style poetry from newer, more modern styles. But in the ancient oral roots, that exact repetition was the defining feature.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. It creates a powerful rhythmic juxtaposition. The poet introduces a theme in the first stanza, say a vibrant image of a peach tree representing youth. Okay. And then plays with that theme through very slight methodical variations in the subsequent stanzas, repeating the core structure exactly. The repetition acts as an anchor.

SPEAKER_00

And then on the complete opposite side of the spectrum, we have the Mayan tradition.

SPEAKER_01

The Popal Vu of the Qish Maya. This is an absolutely fascinating text because Quiche poetry entirely lacks rhyme and meter as we understand them in Western traditions like the Greek epics.

SPEAKER_00

Wait, no rhyme and no meter. Then how does it even sound like poetry? How do you distinguish it from just someone talking?

SPEAKER_01

It relies entirely on incredibly ornate, synonymous parallel structures, a technique known as defracismo.

SPEAKER_00

Defracismo. Right.

SPEAKER_01

They are seldom content with expressing a single idea without immediately embellishing it with complementary concepts or descriptive epithets. In quiche, a speaker won't just say, This is my word.

SPEAKER_00

What do they say?

SPEAKER_01

They will say, This is my word, this is my breath, this is what I say, this is what I declare.

SPEAKER_00

Oh wow.

SPEAKER_01

Everything is stated doubly, sometimes triply. The rhythm is derived from the conceptual echoing, not the syllable count.

SPEAKER_00

It's funny, when modern Western translators get their hands on this stuff, they get so annoyed by it.

SPEAKER_01

They really do.

SPEAKER_00

They view all this doubling as purposeless redundancy. They try to edit it out, trimming the fat to make the plot move faster so it reads like a crisp modern novel.

SPEAKER_01

Which is a tragic misunderstanding of the medium. They are destroying the very technology that allowed the text to survive.

SPEAKER_00

But let's be honest, I can see why a modern reader would be frustrated.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, sure.

SPEAKER_00

We are totally obsessed with linear, fast-paced plots. We want the story to get straight to the point. Reading an epic built on heavy Mayan redundancy feels like watching a movie that keeps showing the exact same scene from slightly different camera angles before finally moving on. It feels slow.

SPEAKER_01

What's deeply fascinating here is the neuroscience behind why that redundancy exists.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, bring in the science.

SPEAKER_01

It is not poor pacing, it is a highly evolved cognitive strategy. Modern neurological research shows that repetition learning highly activates the hippocampus.

SPEAKER_00

The hippocampus being the primary memory center of the brain.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. When information is presented and then immediately represented in a slightly varied parallel structure, the hippocampus is stimulated to encode that data more deeply.

SPEAKER_00

So it's a memory hack.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, it triggers long-term potentiation, strengthening the synaptic connections. This redundancy, this constant looping and paralleling of information is perfectly optimized for human biology. Wow. What a modern reader views as a slow plot was actually a highly advanced mechanism designed to make it difficult to acquire information permanent for an entire community.

SPEAKER_00

So they weren't just telling a story.

SPEAKER_01

Hard coding is the exact right word. They were burning the data onto the biological hard drive.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, but this raises a massive, obvious question. If they went through all this incredible, trouble-inventing dactylic exameter, developing mental libraries of formulas, engineering diffracismo to stimulate the hippocampus, what exactly was the critical information that was so important it needed to be hard-coded? We aren't just talking about entertaining fairy tales here.

SPEAKER_01

No, we are not. And this is where the study of oral tradition intersects with hardcore physical science.

SPEAKER_00

This was honestly one of the most mind-bending details from the research.

SPEAKER_01

Ancient oral poetry didn't just tell fun fictional stories about gods and monsters, it accurately recorded real-world life or death data.

SPEAKER_00

Particularly environmental and geological history. The idea that myth is actually just a highly compressed data storage container is wild.

SPEAKER_01

Let's look at a concrete example from Australia. The Aboriginal Australian cultures have some of the oldest, if not the oldest, continuous oral traditions on the planet.

SPEAKER_00

Set the scene for us. What were they looking at in the study?

SPEAKER_01

Well, recently, geologists and anthropologists conducted a collaborative study with the Gundich Mara people of southwestern Victoria. The Gundich Mara have deeply held oral histories that describe in vivid, terrifying detail the volcanic eruptions of two local volcanoes, Budge Bim and Tower Hill. Okay. Their stories talk about the earth opening up, liquid fire pouring out, the landscape being completely transformed, and the creator being revealing himself through the fire.

SPEAKER_00

Which to a casual 19th century European anthropologist just sounds like a standard creation myth, right? Just a fanciful story to explain why a mountain looks a certain way.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Until modern geologists actually tested the volcanic rock. They used argon argon dating techniques to date the basalt flows.

SPEAKER_00

And what did they find?

SPEAKER_01

They confirmed that Budge Bim and Tower Hill erupted between 34,000 and 40,000 years ago.

SPEAKER_00

34 to 40,000 years ago.

SPEAKER_01

Furthermore, in 1947, an ancient basalt stone axe was found buried underneath the volcanic ash of Tower Hill.

SPEAKER_00

Meaning someone was there.

SPEAKER_01

It proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that human beings were standing there witnessing the eruption. The oral tradition of the Gundich Mar people successfully preserved an accurate record of a geological event. For tens of thousands of years.

SPEAKER_00

Entirely through word of mouth.

SPEAKER_01

Entirely using these exact poetic technologies.

SPEAKER_00

That is staggering. Let's really process that. 40,000 years. Think about how much human history has happened in just the last 2,000 years.

SPEAKER_01

It's immense.

SPEAKER_00

They played a game of telephone for 40 millennia. But because of the structural integrity of their oral tradition, the core data remained perfectly intact.

SPEAKER_01

It's incredible.

SPEAKER_00

And we see this in North America too. The research highlights stories from the Native American tribes of the Pacific Northwest.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, the mythic physical struggle between the Thunderbird and the whale.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Various cultures from Washington State and Vancouver Island have these incredibly dramatic stories. They do. The Thunderbird is this massive, godlike creature that creates thunder just by moving a single feather. It swooks down from the sky and pierces the flesh of a giant whale with its talons.

SPEAKER_01

And the whale fights back.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, diving to the bottom of the ocean, dragging the Thunderbird down. Another variation depicts the Thunderbird lifting the whale entirely out of the water and dropping it back down onto the earth with a massive crash.

SPEAKER_01

Again, it sounds like pure fantasy, like a superhero movie.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

But when seismologists and geologists examine the history of the Cascadia subduction zone, the massive fault line off the coast of the Pacific Northwest. Exactly. They found that these stories are exact step-by-step descriptions of cataclysmic earthquakes and subsequent tsunamis.

SPEAKER_00

How do they extract the data from the myth, though? How does it match up?

SPEAKER_01

Let's break down the mechanics. The whale dragging the Thunderbird into the ocean perfectly describes the rapid withdrawal of the ocean from the shore, which is the immediate precursor to a tsunami. Oh wow. The Thunderbird dropping the giant whale onto the earth is the physical impact of the tsunami wave crashing onto the land. The shaking of the earth is the struggle itself.

SPEAKER_00

And it gets even crazier because science was actually able to date this specific myth.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. By combining indigenous oral accounts, which detailed a winter night terror where the ocean wiped out entire villages, with Japanese historical records of an orphan tsunami arriving in January.

SPEAKER_00

And dendrochronology, too, right?

SPEAKER_01

Yes, which is the study of tree rings in the ghost forests of Washington. Geologists pinpointed the exact date.

SPEAKER_00

So when was it?

SPEAKER_01

The Thunderbird and Whale myth perfectly aligns with a massive magnitude 9.0 earthquake that occurred on January 26, 1700. Another variation of the myth aligns with the Quaid in 900 CE.

SPEAKER_00

So the myth is an incredibly precise regional seismic record.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

If we pull back the lens even further, the research also explores global archetypes. Myths that show up everywhere, across completely disconnected continents.

SPEAKER_01

The two most prominent global archetypes being the Great Flood and the Chaos Serpent. The Great Flood narrative is everywhere. It is heavily detailed in the Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh, the Akkadian Etrhasis, the Hebrew Book of Genesis, the Mayan Popal Vu, and Hindu traditions.

SPEAKER_00

What's a function of it?

SPEAKER_01

It almost always serves as a historical reset, a profound environmental trauma etched into the human consciousness.

SPEAKER_00

And what about the chaos serpent?

SPEAKER_01

That is the archetypal battle between a creator deity and a monstrous riding serpent or dragon representing the chaotic, untamed forces of nature.

SPEAKER_00

Like it.

SPEAKER_01

We see Marduk slaying Tiamat in Babylon, Indra battling Ritra in India, Ra fighting Apophis in Egypt, and Yahweh wrestling Leviathan in the Hebrew texts.

SPEAKER_00

Wow, literally everywhere.

SPEAKER_01

These weren't mere fictions. As Walter Ong and others theorize, they were universal declarations of the purpose of the world.

SPEAKER_00

Establishing order.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, they were narratives establishing the absolute necessity of cosmic order against the constant threat of natural chaos floods, storms, and predators.

SPEAKER_00

But doesn't this bring up a logic problem?

SPEAKER_01

What do you mean?

SPEAKER_00

If these ancient people wanted to warn their descendants about an earthquake or a volcano or the danger of floods, why dress it up in a story about a thunderbird or a chaos servant?

SPEAKER_01

Ah, I see.

SPEAKER_00

Why not just pass down a simple, straightforward rule? Hey, when the ground shakes, run up the mountain, watch out for the big wave. Why encode it in a poem about magical creatures?

SPEAKER_01

Because raw data is incredibly fragile. A simple rule lacks emotional resonance.

SPEAKER_00

So it's easy to forget.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. If I give you a sterile list of safety instructions, you might remember it for a week, maybe a month. But if I tell you a dramatic, terrifying story about a thunderburb dragging a whale into the abyss, accompanied by thunderous drums and rhythmic chanting.

SPEAKER_00

That image sticks in your mind forever.

SPEAKER_01

It's the difference between reading the airplane safety card in the seatback pocket and watching a blockbuster disaster movie.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, that's a perfect analogy. You forget the card instantly. You never forget the movie.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Using characters, especially monumental heavy figures like gods, monsters, and exaggerated heroes creates emotional involvement.

SPEAKER_00

Which locks in the memory.

SPEAKER_01

Walter Ong made a brilliant observation. Oral cultures simply do not organize information into abstract lists. They situate lists and data inside action narratives.

SPEAKER_00

Like the begats in the Bible. It's a massive genealogical spreadsheet, essentially, but it's framed as people doing something, reproducing, living, moving.

SPEAKER_01

Or the famous catalogue of ships in Book Two of the Iliad.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, right.

SPEAKER_01

When you read it on the page, it is literally just a dry, tedious list of Greek contingents, their commanders, and how many ships they brought to the Trojan War.

SPEAKER_00

It's tough to get through.

SPEAKER_01

But for an ancient Greek audience, it was woven into the thrilling narrative of the army assembling for a massive conflict. Every listener would wait with bated breath to hear their own local heroes named in the rhythm.

SPEAKER_00

That makes sense.

SPEAKER_01

People doing things, engaging in action, is vastly more memorable than a static list of facts.

SPEAKER_00

So dressing the data in myth, using narrative and rhythm, is the ultimate preservation strategy. It ensures the survival of the information against the erosion of time.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

But what happens when that data is no longer just about avoiding a tsunami or remembering who your great-grandfather was? What happens when the data is about the survival of the human soul itself?

SPEAKER_01

That is a big shift.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. How did these poetic traits evolve to construct the world's most enduring religions?

SPEAKER_01

This is where the mechanisms of oral tradition reach their absolute peak of complexity. When we look at the formation of sacred texts, the demand for accuracy is no longer just practical, it is metaphysical. The stakes become eternal.

SPEAKER_00

The research dives deep into the ancient Indian religions and the transmission of the Vedas and the mnemonic techniques they used are almost unbelievable.

SPEAKER_01

It's truly mind-boggling.

SPEAKER_00

It makes everything we've talked about so far look like child's play.

SPEAKER_01

We are talking about the Gurakal system in ancient India. The sages recognized that the Vedas, such as the Rig Veda, contained divine cosmic knowledge. Right. It was believed that altering a single syllable or even the pitch of a syllable could disrupt the cosmic order. The Rigveda alone consists of 10,600 verses.

SPEAKER_00

That's huge.

SPEAKER_01

And they preserved it without writing it down, with a level of fidelity that rivals modern digital recording.

SPEAKER_00

How is that humanly possible? 10,000 verses perfectly preserved without a hard drive.

SPEAKER_01

They utilized a system of recitations known as the pathas. It wasn't just repeating the text over and over until you got it right. It was a rigorous, mathematically structured system of cross-checking.

SPEAKER_00

Let's break this down because when I read how this actually worked, my jaw hit the floor. The training starts with the samhitapatha.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, the same patha is the continuous recitation of the Sanskrit words as they appear in a normal sentence bound by the phonetic rules of combination.

SPEAKER_00

Like how the words blend together when spoken quickly. Okay, standard continuous recitation. That makes sense. Then comes the second level. The Patapatha.

SPEAKER_01

In the Padapatha, the student must pause consciously after every single word. They have to restore each word to its original isolated form, stripping away the phonetic blending that naturally happens in speech.

SPEAKER_00

So they have to really know the boundaries of every word.

SPEAKER_01

Right. This ensures that the reciter knows exactly what the individual words are, free from context.

SPEAKER_00

And then comes the absolute mental marathon. The chromopatha.

SPEAKER_01

The chromopatha is a step-by-step sequential pairing. Let's use a simple English sentence to demonstrate.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, go for it.

SPEAKER_01

If the text is the quick brown fox jumps, the student must recite it by pairing the words forward. The quick, quick brown, brown fox, fox jumps.

SPEAKER_00

Wow, that requires intense concentration, but they didn't stop there.

SPEAKER_01

No, they didn't. They moved to variations like the jotta patha, which involved reversing the order of the word pairs mathematically.

SPEAKER_00

How does that say?

SPEAKER_01

It goes forward, backward, forward. So the quick, quick the the quick, quick brown, brown, quick, quick brown.

SPEAKER_00

My brain already hurts. And the final boss of this system is the Gaunapatha.

SPEAKER_01

The Ghana patha is staggeringly complex. Using our sentence, the pattern goes like this: the quick, quick it, the quick brown, brown, quick the bread, the quick brown. And then it moves to the next word. Quick brown, brown, quick, quick brown fox. Fox brown quick quick brown fox.

SPEAKER_00

Imagine doing that mental gymnastics for 10,600 verses. It is a literal verbal Rubik's cube.

SPEAKER_01

It is an impenetrable cryptographic hash. As scholar Michael Witzel noted, this ensured an impeccable textual transmission that is essentially like a paper cording.

SPEAKER_00

Because if you make a mistake, it falls apart.

SPEAKER_01

Right. If a student drops a word or mispronounces a syllable, the mathematical sequence instantly breaks down and exposes the error. This system preserved not just the exact words in the exact order for millennia, but also the long-lost musical and tonal accents of the ancient Vedic language.

SPEAKER_00

That is just an astonishing testament to the capacity of the human brain.

SPEAKER_01

It really is.

SPEAKER_00

But the Vedas aren't the only sacred texts rooted in this oral technology. The research also closely examines Islam and the revelation of the Quran.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, the Quran provides an incredibly clear window into the power of the oral milieu.

SPEAKER_00

Because it was revealed in an oral culture.

SPEAKER_01

The text was revealed to the Prophet Muhammad in the seventh century in an environment where very few people were literate. Paper was practically non-existent in the Bedouin desert.

SPEAKER_00

So memory was everything.

SPEAKER_01

The primary mode of cultural expression, memory, and art for the pre-Islamic Arabs was highly structured, deeply rhythmic oral poetry.

SPEAKER_00

And the very word Quran means recitation in Arabic, right? It implies it is meant to be spoken aloud, not read silently.

SPEAKER_01

Correct. And modern scholars like Alan Dundas and Andrew G. Bannister have done fascinating computational analyses of the original Arabic text to understand its structure.

SPEAKER_00

What did they find?

SPEAKER_01

Bannister used a sophisticated computer database to analyze the phraseology, and he estimated that depending on the length of the phrase you look at, between 23% and 52% of the Quran consists of oral formulas.

SPEAKER_00

Just like Homer's formulas, what do those look like in the context of the Quran?

SPEAKER_01

Often they are the attributes of Allah the Almighty, the all-wise, the all-knowing, the merciful. Okay. These frequently appear as rhythmic doublets at the end of verses, providing a thematic anchor and closing out the rhyme. There are also repeated narrative phrases like Allah created the heavens and the earth, which appears 19 times in the text.

SPEAKER_00

So the rhythmic style, the rhymes, the repeating formulas, they weren't just there to sound beautiful and divine. They were specifically designed to facilitate memorization, the practice of hiffs.

SPEAKER_01

Yes. Because written copies of the Quran were scarce, expensive, and took months to produce by hand, reciting from memory was the absolute predominant mode of preserving the faith.

SPEAKER_00

And the rhythm makes it possible.

SPEAKER_01

The highly rhythmic formulaic structure made it vastly easier to commit the entire book to memory. This created an unbroken chain of human transmitters.

SPEAKER_00

From the very beginning.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. From Muhammad and his companions who memorized the revelations all the way down through the centuries, to the millions of Muslims today who recite the entire text from memory during the month of Ramadan.

SPEAKER_00

I think we have to pause here and address a really sensitive point. Sure. When we talk about sacred texts, whether we are talking about the Vedas, the Quran, or the Bible, and we analyze them using terms like formulas or poetic hacks, doesn't that upset believers?

SPEAKER_01

It's a fair concern.

SPEAKER_00

Does applying the oral formulaic theory diminish the divine nature of these texts? Doesn't it imply they are just human inventions?

SPEAKER_01

It is a crucial question, and it requires careful navigation. But the short answer is no. Analyzing the structure of transmission does not make a theological judgment on the source of the revelation.

SPEAKER_00

How do believers reconcile the science with their faith then?

SPEAKER_01

Well, for billions of believers across different faiths, the oral formulaic nature of these texts is not seen as a human flaw. It is seen as a profound feature of divine wisdom. Think about it logically from a theological perspective. If God or the divine is going to communicate ultimate truths to humanity, it makes perfect sense that the communication would be formatted in the exact cognitive structure that is perfectly optimized for human memory and preservation.

SPEAKER_00

So God is speaking in parallelisms and formulas because that's the language the human hard drive naturally reads.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The medium is an integral part of the message. We see this explicitly acknowledged in the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox traditions, which the research also touches upon. Oh, really? Yeah, they do not rely on scripture alone. They explicitly elevate sacred tradition.

SPEAKER_00

What is that?

SPEAKER_01

This is the living, breathing teachings of Christ passed on orally by the apostles through their preaching, their rituals, and their example, preserved from generation to generation.

SPEAKER_00

Ah, see.

SPEAKER_01

The unbroken oral transmission is viewed as equally sacred and practically necessary alongside the written word.

SPEAKER_00

That is a profound way to look at it. The rhythm, the repetition, the strict phrasing, they aren't signs of human limitation. They are the necessary, magnificent vessels designed to carry eternal truths through the biological minds of flawed humans.

SPEAKER_01

Beautifully said.

SPEAKER_00

But eventually the landscape changed. Humanity didn't just have biological minds anymore. We invented the pen, the clay stylus, the printing press. We did. What happened to all of these ancient auditory hacks when we finally transitioned to the page?

SPEAKER_01

This brings us to a fascinating historical process known as ossification.

SPEAKER_00

Ossification, like turning to bone.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. When society shifted from primary orality to a literate culture, everything about how we process information changed. But it wasn't an instant switch. Right. When scribes in ancient Mesopotamia began pressing wedge-shaped cuneiform into wet clay tablets, or when Egyptian priests began carving hieroglyphs into the massive stone walls of tombs, they didn't magically invent a whole new written language with new rules.

SPEAKER_00

They just wrote down the oral language.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. They wrote down the dactylic hexameters, the formulas, the parallelisms, the repetitive epithets.

SPEAKER_00

In writing provided humanity with incredible permanence. A clay tablet baked in a fire can survive under the sand for 5,000 years.

SPEAKER_01

But that permanence came at a significant cost. It ossified or froze the text.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell Because it was no longer a fluid live performance adapting to an audience.

SPEAKER_01

Right. In the oral tradition, as we discussed with the jazz improvisation analogy, the bard adapted the story to the live audience's reactions. Every single performance was unique.

SPEAKER_00

But once it's written down.

SPEAKER_01

Once the text is written in stone or baked in clay, the improvisation permanently stops. The narrative is locked in place forever.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Ross Powell So writing essentially froze the music. It's like the difference between going to an incredible live concert where the band jams, extends the guitar solos, changes the lyrics to shout out the city they're playing in, and feeds off the crowd's energy versus listening to the polished, mixed studio album on Spotify. The Spotify track is permanent, it's easily accessible, and it's perfect, but it will never ever change.

SPEAKER_01

I love that analogy. It captures the exact loss of vitality that happens during ossification. And what happens when a society gets completely used to the Spotify track?

SPEAKER_00

They start to forget how to jam.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. In ancient Egypt, we see this transition beautifully captured in the pyramid texts. The research highlights the tomb of Pharaoh Nus from the hieroglyphic texts carved into his tomb at Sequara are some of the oldest religious texts in the world, dating back to around 2350 BCE.

SPEAKER_00

Okay.

SPEAKER_01

But scholars analyzing the grammar and structure note that they are largely a compilation of much older texts that must have circulated purely orally for centuries before being carved.

SPEAKER_00

How can they tell?

SPEAKER_01

When you read them, you can clearly see the poetic language. The king is described climbing ramps to the sky, flying on falcon wings, wrapping up twisted snakes. It is deeply rhythmic, performative oral magic ossified into solid stone.

SPEAKER_00

But the influence of that oral magic didn't just vanish when we learned how to read, did it? We didn't completely abandon the biological hard drive just because we had paper?

SPEAKER_01

Not at all. The human brain hasn't fundamentally changed its architecture in the last 5,000 years. The media theorist, Marshall McLuhan, and Walter Ong developed a concept called secondary orality to describe the modern electronic age we live in today.

SPEAKER_00

Secondary orality.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Meaning the age of radio, television, film, and the internet.

SPEAKER_01

Precisely. Today our culture is entirely dependent on writing and print. Everything is backed by servers, scripts, teleprompters, and digital text. Right. But we increasingly experience this information orally. We are returning to the spoken word as our primary mode of consumption, but it is a spoken word supported by a vast, invisible infrastructure of text.

SPEAKER_00

Which brings us right to the modern echo of everything we've talked about today. The communal auditory nature of ancient poetry is completely resilient. It survives everywhere you look.

SPEAKER_01

It really does.

SPEAKER_00

The research points to modern spoken word poetry, to slam poetry competitions, to live storytelling events.

SPEAKER_01

In all of those modern formats, the performer is using the exact same tools: rhythm, tone, physical presence, dramatic pacing, and vocal inflection to create a shared immersive reality with the audience.

SPEAKER_00

They are directly mirroring the tribal storytellers sitting around the fire.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

And think about the very medium we're communicating through right now: long-form audio shows, conversational deep dives. It relies on the exact same cognitive principles. That's very true. We use framing devices, recurring motifs, natural conversational pacing, and emotional inflection to hold your attention and help you process the information. We aren't reciting dactylic hexameter, thank goodness, but we are utilizing the architecture of the human voice to transmit data effectively.

SPEAKER_01

If we step back and connect all of this to the bigger picture, it proves that despite all our technological advancements, we still process information best when it is wrapped in narrative, rhythm, and human emotion.

SPEAKER_00

So what does this all mean for you listening to this right now? It means that every single time you use an acronym like ROI-g BY to remember the colors of the rainbow.

SPEAKER_01

Or every time you rely on the rhyme, 30 days half, September, April, June, and November to figure out your schedule.

SPEAKER_00

Every time you find yourself captivated and moved by the rhythmic, repetitive cadence of a great public speaker or a passionate politician, you are experiencing the exact same ancient cognitive technology.

SPEAKER_01

You're utilizing the exact same tools that preserve the epic of Gilgamesh in the sands of Mesopotamia.

SPEAKER_00

You are using the tools that allowed the Gunatmara to remember a volcanic eruption for 40 millennia. You're using the tools that survived the ice age.

SPEAKER_01

It is a profound, unbroken legacy. From essential survival tools and mnemonic hard drives to the structured classical literature of Greece and China to the spoken word art of today.

SPEAKER_00

It is the unbroken chain of human memory. Thank you so much for guiding us through this immense stack of research today. We've seen how poetic traits like meter, formulas, and parallelism weren't just decorative artistic choices. They were the structural steel of human knowledge. They are the reason we know who we are.

SPEAKER_01

It has been an absolutely fascinating journey. The transition from the mind as the archive to the page and back to the modern auditory world is the defining shift in human history.

SPEAKER_00

But I want to leave you, our listener, with a final lingering idea to mull over. For 40,000 years, humanity's greatest superpower was our ability to store vast libraries of knowledge inside the biological rhythm of the human mind. We had to literally sing our world into existence every single generation to keep from forgetting it.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

Now we outsource almost 100% of our memory. We hand our navigation over to GPS, our schedules to our smartphones, our history to the cloud, and our problem solving to AI. If our brains are no longer required to hold the data of our civilization through song, rhyme, and focused memory, what exactly is the human mind evolving to do next? What happens to us when the music finally stops?

SPEAKER_01

That is quite the thought.

SPEAKER_00

Thank you for joining us on this deep dive. Keep exploring, keep asking questions, and we'll see you next time.