
unSILOed with Greg LaBlanc 589. Reenvisioning The Study of Ancient History feat. Walter Scheidel
Oct 15, 2025
Walter Scheidel, a Stanford humanities professor and author of acclaimed books, advocates for a transformation in the study of ancient history. He discusses the need to dismantle departmental silos to better understand inequality's roots. Walter argues that historical crises like wars and plagues have played crucial roles in driving societal change. He emphasizes the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration and rethinks the place of the Classics in modern scholarship, ultimately proposing the idea of 'foundational history' to explore shared human challenges.
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Discovering Ancient History In The Library
- Greg recalls being frustrated that classics courses felt like literature, not history.
- He discovered Rostovtsev in the library and realized ancient historical scholarship existed outside the history department.
Rethinking Classics As A Template
- Classics arose from a 19th-century template that privileged Greek and Latin texts above other evidence.
- Walter Scheidel argues we should treat the formative ancient phase as planetary and foundational, not a narrow philological domain.
Ancients As A Planetary Foundational Phase
- Scheidel urges studying the ancient formative phase across regions because similar structural innovations arose independently worldwide.
- He calls that phase 'foundational history' since it created institutions and cognitive frameworks still shaping our world.




