The foundation of capitalism was a mix of new financial tools, a shift in personal ethics, and legal protections that made trust a measurable, tradable asset. It’s like the software and the hardware of the system were finally being installed at the same time.
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Nia: You know, Eli, I was looking at my phone today and thinking about how we can buy literally anything with a tap. But then I found out that the "high-tech" roots of this whole system actually go back to clay tablets in ancient Mesopotamia.
Eli: It’s wild, right? We think of capitalism as this modern, Wall Street thing, but it started with those tablets recording grain transactions and Phoenician sailors risking everything to trade across the Mediterranean. It wasn’t a single "lightbulb" moment; it was this centuries-long evolution from informal bartering to merchant guilds.
Nia: Exactly! And I love the idea of these "islands of capital"—like 12th-century Aden, where merchants from all over the world were already using credit and sophisticated accounting. It makes our digital world feel a lot older than we realize.
Eli: That’s the perfect way to put it. So, let’s dive into how these early merchant networks eventually exploded into the global force we see today.