Why most narrative history is wrong: Even the best histories fail [View all]
to identify the real causal forces that drive events. Science explains why
Its almost universally accepted that learning the history of something the true story of how it came about is one way to understand it. Its almost as widely accepted that learning its history is sometimes the best way to understand something. Indeed, in many cases, its supposed that the only way to understand some things is by learning their history.
All three of these suppositions are wrong. Cognitive science, evolutionary anthropology, and, most of all, neuroscience are in the process of showing us at least three things about history: (1) our attachment to history as a vehicle for understanding has a long evolutionary pedigree and a genetic basis; (2) exactly what it is about the human brain that makes almost all the explanations history has ever offered us wrong; and (3) how our evolution shaped a useful tool for survival into a defective theory of human nature.
Many readers may find the first of these assertions easy to accept. Our recourse to history true stories as a means of understanding is proverbially second nature. If science can show its literally first nature, bred in the bone, a part of what makes us tick, somehow genetically hardwired, it may help us understand features of human life and culture that are ancient, ubiquitous, and fixed beyond change. But the next two assertions will strike most readers as literally incredible. How could all the explanations history offers be wrong, and how could evolution by itself have saddled us with any particular theory, let alone a theory of human nature that is completely wrong?
https://www.salon.com/2018/10/07/why-most-narrative-history-is-wrong/
I find this a fascinating topic. I've often pondered the apparent need humans have for a particular structure of story, even in the presentation of real events. How we can be swayed to believe false stories over true stories if the false story is a better "story." It certainly seems highly relevant to politics. RW media knows how to tell stories that are very compelling, at least to about half the population.
However, I've got down to about the 10th paragraph and, well, maybe it's just me but so far it seems repetitive and not clearly written.

If anyone has read or does now read this piece, I'd love to know what you think about that aspect, as well as of the information presented.
It could just be that it's a topic beyond my comprehension, what with the Cognitive science, evolutionary anthropology, and neuroscience all figuring in, and the current political situation wearing me down, but I guess I'm going to try again to get through it...