EPISODE · Jan 4, 2026 · 17 MIN
3.3 Americas — Threads Knotted by Conquest
from A brief history of AI from ancient times to the present day · host Kristy Anamoutou
Threads Knotted by Conquest: How American Knowledge Survived Its DestructionA thread can be cut. It can also, sometimes, be reknotted.In this episode, we explore what survived of American thought after the cataclysm of conquest—and what this thought might teach us about artificial intelligence.When the conquistadors landed, they found civilizations whose knowledge systems rivaled their own. They destroyed them methodically. Thousands of manuscripts were burned. Diego de Landa, Bishop of Yucatán, boasted of having destroyed "a great number" of Mayan books. Oral traditions were interrupted. Experts were killed or forcibly converted.But fragments survived.You will discover the Codex Vergara, written around 1540 under Spanish colonization. This document preserves the calculation methods of Aztec surveyors—and reveals something astonishing: adaptive algorithms. The surveyors did not follow a single method. They chose from a repertoire of techniques according to the terrain's shape. This flexibility prefigures what computer scientists call conditional architectures.You will meet the tlamatinimeh—"those who know something"—those Nahua philosophers whose sophistication James Maffie's work has revealed. For them, the world was tlalticpac—a slippery, unstable place where truth depended on context. Two apparently contradictory propositions could be simultaneously true. This tolerance for ambiguity strangely resembles how large language models work—with probabilities, distributions, nuances.And the concept of teotl—that dynamic force flowing through all things, neither matter nor spirit, but continuous process of transformation. A relational ontology where nothing exists in isolation, where everything is defined by its relationships. The knowledge graphs of contemporary AI embody, unknowingly, this worldview.The conquistadors cut the threads. But the patterns they formed have not entirely disappeared. They await, in colonial archives, to be reknotted.
What this episode covers
Threads Knotted by Conquest: How American Knowledge Survived Its DestructionA thread can be cut. It can also, sometimes, be reknotted.In this episode, we explore what survived of American thought after the cataclysm of conquest—and what this thought might teach us about artificial intelligence.When the conquistadors landed, they found civilizations whose knowledge systems rivaled their own. They destroyed them methodically. Thousands of manuscripts were burned. Diego de Landa, Bishop of Yucatán, boasted of having destroyed "a great number" of Mayan books. Oral traditions were interrupted. Experts were killed or forcibly converted.But fragments survived.You will discover the Codex Vergara, written around 1540 under Spanish colonization. This document preserves the calculation methods of Aztec surveyors—and reveals something astonishing: adaptive algorithms. The surveyors did not follow a single method. They chose from a repertoire of techniques according to the terrain's shape. This flexibility prefigures what computer scientists call conditional architectures.You will meet the tlamatinimeh—"those who know something"—those Nahua philosophers whose sophistication James Maffie's work has revealed. For them, the world was tlalticpac—a slippery, unstable place where truth depended on context. Two apparently contradictory propositions could be simultaneously true. This tolerance for ambiguity strangely resembles how large language models work—with probabilities, distributions, nuances.And the concept of teotl—that dynamic force flowing through all things, neither matter nor spirit, but continuous process of transformation. A relational ontology where nothing exists in isolation, where everything is defined by its relationships. The knowledge graphs of contemporary AI embody, unknowingly, this worldview.The conquistadors cut the threads. But the patterns they formed have not entirely disappeared. They await, in colonial archives, to be reknotted.
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3.3 Americas — Threads Knotted by Conquest
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