Was this humanity's biggest mistake? - BBC REEL
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- Опубликовано: 9 мар 2020
- The Neolithic ushered in dramatic changes: civilisations with large populations, advancements in technology, arts and trade. But with the advent of agriculture, humans also began to experience malnutrition, starvation and epidemic diseases.
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#bbcreel #bbc #bbcnews - Хобби
"Many were increasingly of the opinion that they’d all made a big mistake in coming down from the trees in the first place. And some said that even the trees had been a bad move, and that no one should ever have left the oceans."
- The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
sad loss that man, thanks for all the fish...
DAMN, I literally clicked on the video just to leave the same comment. You’re awesome Carolyn 😄
Haha, this Douglas Adams quote was the first thing I thought of when I saw the video title.
DON'T. PANIC!!!
im pretty sure that humans got out of the trees because the climate at the time became dry and the trees died, if we would be doing so good in the trees then why would we leave?
10,000 years ago they had no clue that farming grain and livestock would lead to the madness we have now.
Especially anasthesia. Sheer madness.
true
If they had been shown a DVD of the future they were setting their descendants up for, they might have done a U-turn immediately.
@@TwobirdsbreakingfreeRight 😂
The switch over to agriculture was a foregone conclusion after beer-making from grass seeds was established.
It's hard to hunt when you're drunk.
BBC Reel's recommendation to avoid epidemics: We should have remained a hunter and gatherer society
Return to Monke
& climbing trees
@@longyu9336 You are retained your childlishness
@Martin Pospisil Yeah i grasp that.I say that people after neothelitic revolution maybe earlier become childlishness , because of traditions and psychoviral cultures
@Martin Pospisil Theese three people up , think like that
This reminds me of a cartoon: two guys sit in a cave. One says to the other: the water we drink is pure, the air we breathe is clean, all the food we eat is organic, we get plenty of exercise, so how come nobody lives past thirty?
Lots of people lived past 30 ... the reason average lifespan is thought to be so low is infant mortality.
Exactly!
Lemme play Devil’s advocate for the fun of it. Maybe in those 30 years, they enjoyed more pleasure than most of us can in 70 long years now-a-days. Conceivable? Possible? Debatable?
They’d have purer water and air presumably. Not once or twice, but 24*7, presumably. Maybe not as much social conservatism. Idk. Worth pondering the pros and cons certainly.
@@FarhanAmin1994 brute force is the ultimate socially conservative one.
Right but the capitalists would have you believe it is a choice between that and Monsanto
You spend some time out in nature, I'm talking legit a few weeks and just the bare essentials, and you'd be shocked at how amazing you feel. In just a few days you're failing asleep easier and waking up right before the sun comes up without any alarm feeling refreshed. It's amazing how easy it is to just focus on the task you are doing instead of worrying about a million other things. It truly is a peaceful way of life and we'd be foolish to think that what we have doesn't take it's toll on our body. Do we go hungry no yet depression, suicide rates, and drug abuse steadily climb higher. Regardless of where this debate goes I think we can all agree that we are not made for this chaotic of a lifestyle.
"Convenience"....alla those inventions that made life easier are..well..inconvenient in the end!
…and then you break your arm, and starve to death or die from complications, with no medical services. Or a bear eats you.
@David Whitehouse Well currently you get into a car accident and break your arm so the doctor prescribes you pain killers, because heaven forbid people feel any amount of pain. Then you 6 months later you're addicted to opiods and buying whatever you can get from some shady drug dealer. From there you're either stuck trying to get sober, you're a full blown addicted that can't hold down a job, or you OD and die. I've literally seen that exact scenario play put multiple times. I didn't even talk about the medical debt that can bankrupt you or the risk of losing your job. Don't act like we live in some wonderful paradise.
Also most bears are not going to eat you. Grizzly bears might, polar bears definitely will. Black bears, which are what is most common, are like giant raccoons and are honestly very pleasent to watch. Just don't mess with their cubs.
Where did you spend those few weeks?
@@adanderson8211 they’ll slap any word as long as it sells
I think I agree with this idea. Maybe like migratory birds and mammals, we were supposed to constantly move. Like the nature of our habitat (Earth). I think we defy what's designed for us, and now we're facing the consequences.
Nothing was designed
@@tomwh1993 okay but what is your idea with the video?
@@tomwh1993 evolution does shape our genome and u can call that a form of design. by evolutions design we are nomadic creatures meant to hunt and gather
@@the1shrubbery You can call that design if you want but you'd be wrong. Design implies planning and an endpoint, evolution has neither of these things. The changes in the way that humans live since we transitioned from hunter gatherers to today is astronomically fast in evolutionary time frames because we do have the capability to design, plan etc. We've left evolutionary pressure behind really and are now something else. Whether or not this turns out to be a good thing for humanity is too early to say, its complicated. The only thing we do know is that its impossible to go back now we've started on this path. You might have heard of it but Yuval Noah Harari's book Sapiens goes into this in more detail, I'm probably just misquoting it here
@@tomwh1993 Show me an evolutionary disaster then mr wall of text
You know, without the neolithic we wouldn't have the Garand or the Shrek movie.
We wouldn't have idiocracy
The Garand? You mean the rifle?
Yeah, as I lay in my comfortable bed in my air-conditioned room enjoying an ice cold beverage from my refrigerator, I often wish humanity was still scrounging for food in the jungle.
10 years of liveable climate
For ten thousands years slaves and serfs working on fields in miserable conditions were saying. - I have it bad now, but I am so happy Jack shall have air conditioning and internet porn in the future.
@Rick Random Yes, thank you, Rick Random, for taking a moment to remember their sacrifice by leaving a YT comment with your modern electronic device. I'm sure they really appreciate it.
@@dolekanteel2178 They also ate their kids when times got tough and the herds of wild animals weren’t available. Wake up.
@@dolekanteel2178 I am guessing this is from someone who has never hunted and gathered for any period of time. It is hard work, and starvation is a way of life. Hunting animals requires a lot of energy, and you're competing against every other human and large predator animal for the same food resources. In late Spring and Summer it is easier to hunt animals, but in Autumn and Winter, even if you successfully hunt an animal it is very difficult to find with any fat on them.
... meaning to say that even big catastrophies are sometimes started by good intentions. Humans only wanted to have plenty of pancakes for breakfast, but ended distrying their only planet.
The greatest contribution of the Neolithic period to society was the introduction of the farmer's daughter.
I think all changes brings consequences. It is only hindsight which determines good or bad. And by then they are both moot?
🤣
Historically Peoples behaviour changes to give them a competitive advantage. The fact that it was not a perfect trade does not mean it was not a good trade.
yet, this trade is the one that threatens our very existance. because of agriculture, our population exploded and led to unregulated industry and pollution and global warming.
"Humanity" have NEVER acted all together in anything. Start with
ONE group, somewhere.
This transition from nomadic life style to sedentary is just a theory based on observations in a few archaeological sites. It does not prove that humans in other parts of the world made same transition. You can find today hunter gatherers in other parts of the world like the Amazon, parts of Africa and other places. Also like the chicken and the egg is not certain if the hunger, diseases and growth of population and technology were caused by the transition or were the cause for the transition.
People just want what their believe is true , people have prejudice and judgment . Evolutionary psychology. Farmer and majority support farming . That’s all .
I am a hunter and gatherer, as soon I left behind all these agricultural minded people my life changed and I found a true potential partner. Insane how clear this is to me now.
Consider the Middle East when watching this. Boundaries were drawn Post WW1 which fundamentally changed the lives of Nomadic people who had lived in the region for millennia without geographic restrictions.
as if somebody planned all this, we just evolved. There are still hunter gatherers out there, not everyone can.
Kind of sad that every step we take forward to be a more civilized species we end up having to take two steps back.
People are easily led. A surplus of resources allows a parasite class of Narcissists and Psychopaths to emerge. Most people are apathic sheep and follow them rather than themselves
@@Isochest Couldn't have been said better. We have the ability to heal, it's only a matter of when we start. In fact, I think most of us don't even know where to start. I think we need to find a way to exist with nature in a relationship where all things benefit.
Peogress - every step forward brings unforseen side effects, some annoying, some humiliating, some deadly.
@@user-gs3pt1uf1g progress. The word. Hence Henry George wrote a book called Progress and Poverty. This highlights the quest of monopolists to enslave humanity for their own personal gain.'
we were far more civilized when we lived in caves.
Crawling out of the sea is where it all started to go wrong.
Once civilization falls we will probably go back to this way of life.
Answer: no, no it wasn't humans biggest mistake.
The main idea is progress not perfection, the amount of amazing human triumphs that this change brought on is undescribable.
To say anything else is just puzzling
thats just the click bait, within the first seconds she says no, its a trade off.
Our modern progress has been stolen at the price of impoverishing most of our own population and stealing resources and labor from the rest of the world.
These Wealth redistributors aka -Communists disguised as scientists- will stop at nothing to convince us that their world view is the only one that counts.
@@letsgobrandon987
Except that what is really happening is the opposite, trolls and shills and sock-puppet bots like you are paid or programmed to spout garbage like your post and worse, so it is really the oligarch thieves that seek to destroy the government and provoke division that are the problem. The polarity of the wealth redistribution today is that the rich are sucking up more and more of the value streams and companies, and then paying think tanks to think of stupid dishonest ways to justify it - like your bass-ackwards comment.
@@justgivemethetruth Get some therapy comrade. Marxism is not what people want.
I think farming & settled existence probably was the product of necessity rather than choice. Ie: climatic changes/excessive populations/other environmental pressures led to famines & that led to a much more intense reliance upon grains. It's quite possible that the mechanisms of plants growing from seed were already known, but of limited use to mobile peoples..
Want to gather people to live the simple life like them in small group , withdraw from industrial pollution of our foods body and soul freedom.
@@Alternativewayforlife starts with one...thats what im doing anyway. Chucked the whole urban bullshit routine, bought an old 3ton truck/rv conversion with solar etc, and just stopped paying a mortgage/rent/power/gas/water/...its a long list. Been doing this 2yrs now and well settled into it. Im parked up on the driveway of an empty block of flats that was trashed by squatters in melbourne. It must be heritage listed - itd be 1920s..amazn spot. And i live as simply as possible. My carbon footprint is miniscule bcoz i dont indulge in convenience (+pollution). Its really that simple at end of day..for me at least..
Necessity for the egos of “chieftains”, warlords and “priests”
@@adanderson8211 what is your job ? Your income?
@@adanderson8211 your food source and shelter ?
Think about it in terms of an ecosystem, if the things that sustain our population are not sustainable the reality is we are experiencing a boom and bust. The more we ignore the signs by kicking the can down the road the more potential and momentum our bust will have when the time comes. Climate change does not pose much threat to our planet, earth has seen many such events. it does how ever pose a huge threat to our current way of life. Our greed could mean our demise if we do not find a way to continue our growth and expansion without causing more harm. Remember this point,, our current civilisation model represents an absolutely tiny fragment of time.
yeah, hopefully with the passage of time as more women become educated the population can start to decrease. we can only hope that human ingenuity can solve global warming and keep global temperate from raising past the 4 degree point
Fossil fuels are a need of mans life. Until nuclear power, no alternative
Actually it's a good point. It does sound out there in this video, but if you read the Sapiens trilogy you would know that this question has so much more to it
by whom?
@@knotkool1 Yuval Noah Harari. There is some evidence that suggests hunter gatherers had bigger brains than their neolithic counterparts. Agriculture opened up niches for unremarkable water carriers to pass on their unremarkable genes.
@@WilliamBarker water carriers?
@@davidregi7571 Assembly line workers = menial unskilled repetitive labor (It's a quote from the book)
“The average forager had wider, deeper, and more varied knowledge of her immediate surroundings than most of her modern descendants.
There is some evidence that the size of the average Sapiens brain has actually decreased since the age of foraging. Survival in that era required superb mental abilities from everyone. When agriculture and industry came along people could increasingly rely on the skills of others for survival, and new ‘niches for imbeciles’ were opened up. You could survive and pass your unremarkable genes to the next generation by working as a water carrier or an assembly-line worker. . . .
-Yuval Noah Harari, Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind (2018)
A cold beer, warm tasty food and snacks and a choice of clothing tells me that I am happy living in the Post Neolithic Age 😀
Add my happy pets as well 🐕🐱
Greetings from Germany...🍺🖐
Because you rich
As Ian Welsh says:
“Hunter-gatherers are, generally speaking, healthier than agriculturalists and pastoralists. They live longer, suffer less from disease, are taller, the women have wider hips and suffer less from childbirth, they have better dentition and so on. The societies, again with some exceptions, are more egalitarian than most agricultural societies (though very early agricultural societies are more egalitarian than late hunter-gatherer societies, again, in general). They also have vastly more free time than agriculturalists.”
“Basically, being a hunter-gatherer is about as good as it gets for most of human existence.”
And If you need guidance on how to meditate or achieve spiritual goals and you are between beginner and beginner-intermediate, Ian may be able to help for his standard fee of 150 dollars an hour
Unless the climate changes, your prey starts to die out, and there are no more berries.
In the 70s I bought vinyl records.
Now I have instant access to 30 million songs. I like tech progress.
Television journalism would be our second biggest problem then
Humanity is still an illusive utopian idea in a cosmological timeline! We were never there in written history.
I think when humans went from Hunter Gatherer to Farming that was nor bad. It was the development of states (countries) which I think was worse. We could have all been living in farming communities without the need to form into countries.
Agreed. Mostly. Local areas each have their own character and identity but national identity is a highly destructive construct that leads to war and entrenches the power of the few over the many. (Feudalism, where land is owned or controlled by an elite and farmed by serfs isn't any better though. Nor is common ownership of land because most find change threatening and so innovation is stymied.) The other mistake was the invention of the corporation in its current form. It certainly facilitated economic exploitation but this was at the cost of any sort of social obligation or responsibility. The earth can't support a hunter gatherer population of any size. Hunter gatherer numbers were limited because of the limit on resources. But given an efficient trade and communication network, and a ban on corporations, there's no completely insurmountable reason why people couldn't voluntarily choose to live in communities that fostered various specialisations, not merely food production. It would favour widespread cooperation between both individuals and different communities. There would be major hurdles but it might be better than what we've got now.
Funny, their jobs as researchers would be impossible in a nomadic society.
There is no better account of this subject than that presented in "The Ascent of Man" (book and TV series) by Jacob Bronowski in 1973.
thank you. but it does not convey any negativity to the schism. which is the subject of this video.
That was an incredible show. I wish someone would sponsor Peter Jackson to remaster it ...
@@edwardfletcher7790 The TV series is on 16 mm film, so if scanned and restored using modern methods could be reproduced at very high quality (1080p).
Nice to see someone remember that ... it was a great series.
I’m trying to imagine with today’s population large tribes roaming around for resources. I don’t think it would work out so well.
Earth's population would not have grown to the poportions it has today, as birth rates would have been less and death rates would have been greater. What we have today is a natural progression of mankind from subsistance living to a more consistantly sustainable means of feeding a population - aka: agriculture. It was inevitable.
You have no clue how easy the modern hunter gatherer would be without farmer and industrial people destroying ecosystem and aniamls . They probably get foods like 20 mins .
So, we traded harmony for possession. Sounds like a deal with the devil. The Neolithic Period was when we were kicked out of the garden?
Oddly enough, there are theory's about early agriculture which stipulates that the apple eve ate was actually a fig, which were one of earliest cultivated plants, and its was the women, I.e. eve who discovered/developed agriculture originally as a means to provide extra support to the hunters during the hard times of the mini ice age (younger drias). Inadvertently causing humanity problems for thousands of years to come as we became reliant on our grain stores and domesticated animals.
Ah yes, the harmony of the hunter/gatherer. Kill your food before it kills you...
I once read, that a neolitic used about 1 1/2 hours a day on getting food. Few works that litle now.. ;o)
Every change has a cost, but this idea in the video is not the biggest mistake. The biggest mistake was the implenentation of the medical system beyond damage repair like stitching wounds and setting bones. That is the biggest source of all the current ills we currently face.
Explain wha you mean please, but don't really see your point?
@@justgivemethetruth most ailments are largely based in or a response to genetic sequences, some sequences are better than others, the ones that are not are most often the cause of sickness. The medical system preserves the not so good traits, allows them to spread. Up until now everything the medical system saves has been a slow build up to what will be a critical point that causes a really bad problem on a societal level, the advent of rna vaccines is the beginning of more rapid consequences. What was once a minor scoped problem is now much larger today, continued support and use of the medical system as it is will only increase the scope and severity. The problem that bothers me the most is the ones who will have to bear this will not e the ones who chose to, they will be lied to and they will pay for the choices of the ones before them. Natural selection is the only way forward, it has been proven far longer than the so called human species has existed.
@@patryn36 Isn't gene therapy a solution to our species-wide accumulation of maladaptive traits?
@@howtoappearincompletely9739 with as corrupted as the people are that are in control of that, i would not rely on that at all.
Those people are lying to you all now as it is and they have no incentive to change that at all.
@@patryn36 Well, if it's a choice between that and the species-wide abolition of medicine, so that people can live their "nasty, brutish, and short" lives "like Nature intended", I think I'll choose the gene therapy and the shadowy forces who control it.
Neolithic & Paleolithic are incredibly cleaver terms.
Not only do they denote that the agricultural and livestock revolution was a significant event in human history, but they are constructed as old stone (paleo lithica), and new stone (neo lithica)? Just to give the layman such as myself enough context to realize they are both still in the stone age, this way I can see where the periods fit in the ages. Thank you cleave science people (presumably paleontologist) from long ago, you've coined beautiful terminology.
🤣🤣🤔🤥
is this meant to be satire?
@@muzammilibrahim5011 no, English is not native to everyone... can't a non-native speaker marvel at how it interplays with Latin?
@@Ichihiro36 Strictly speaking, these terms are Greek in origin, not Latin. But you're right that these are well-coined terms.
The Book "Sapiens" by Yuval Noah Harari really lays that out very well
Hey guys, I highly recommend Yuval Noah Harari's Sapiens, he has explained it so perfectly how Agriculture actually domesticated Mankind and he objectively proves that quality of life has steadily been declining ever since we started farming, from a purely species point of view it was a success because it allowed us to reproduce massively and become the dominant species, that was evolution at work but the suffering of the individual has only increased he has explained it quite well, it would take pages to explain it here.
Mankind had already been domesticated before agriculture
6 in one hand, 1/2 a dozen in the other. There is good & bad in BOTH societies. The difference between humans & other species is that we can think, instead of just using instinct.
Which is good & bad.
#bbc reel, i like to listen to these vids as podcasts, playing in the background. and wehn sumting comes up interesting, i then look at the screen. it would be nice to have everything audible in english as well.
Humanity's biggest mistake is treating agriculture as though it's humanity's biggest mistake. Think for a minute if we acted on that and tried to undo agriculture.
The volume levels are off, otherwise an interesting video!
bunk..... if the hunter gatherer life style was in anyway superior then they would not be having this conversation right now. Clearly these people have never spent a day in the wilderness with only a rock and stick for protection from the elements.
It's anti-western CCP propaganda, literally.
"Hunting and Gathering" never stopped. The "Transition" to Agriculture wasn't a transition but merely an addition.
Clearly ... hierarchy, slavery, rape, war, famine, all came from this change ... but it was not a conscious choice. If your neighbors attack you, you are stuck, what else can you do but adapt so you can attack them back or defend yourself by deterring further attacks.
Everything you said in that first sentence sounds stupid.
Very false. Especially about hirachy. Strong groups of tribes are very hirachacle. And theres nothig wrong with that. All strong families need a clear hirachy to be strong and sustainable.
@@Treckorz
that's just not true, and very poor spelling to boot.
The solution lies not in going back to hunter-gatherer based societies altogether; but more on being close to nature in our day to affairs & practicing the yoga-vedanta way of life enmasse.
The biggest mistake was that we evolved from a simple organism into humans. Thats when all the problems begun. Life is compicated. Mayby life itself is a mistake.
If it was 'mistake,' we can now at least discuss the question globally, via tchnology, as to whether reverting back to being small groups of hunter-gatherers would be better for us, on balance.
Spoiler, it was not a mistake as without it that lady wouldn’t be sitting there having the technology to know about the past to start with (look at Australia)
This is the template of what is called a stupid comment.
I'm looking at Australia .. now what?!
@@paulryan2128 the aborigines didn’t transition, didn’t workout great at the end
If you look at the sole purpose of life and evolution from a biological point of view, it's always that you live and propogate your species without dying out. Looking where we are at now, it doesn't look like a bad decision till we overpopulate and start dying of hunger and even out in an equilibrium. Even then we'd be multiple times the strength of the Neolithic age.
Life is purpose. There no purpose beyond life
The biggest mistake is when a fish trying to get on land
Humanity does not make mistakes…it just grows, migrates and evolves in no direction at all. It is…….
Totally disagree with that hypothesis. It was a natural progression with all actions.
I think we should've never come down from the trees in the first place
The flute playing was such that I couldn't continue with this video, How some people get professional positions is beyond me.
The biggest mistake was when fish evolved to live on land. No, wait, it was the emergence of multicellular organisms. Or the emergence of life. It was so nice when everything was barren rock and empty ocean
We're talking about humans ie homo sapiens.
A viable human population of hunter gatherers caps at about a hundred million so it would certainly be better for the health of the planet as a whole.
The Turkish people of today migrated to Anatolia from central Asia some time in the middle ages. They have absolutely nothing to do with the neolithic revolution at all.
It is my hope that the BBC Reel speaks to a society that values Scientific endeavors and Understanding. Carry ON!
The music is really incongruous in this clip.
1 mans poison is another mans passion.
Australian aborigines lived pre Neolithic lifestyle. Like a couple of hundred families of Macoys in eternal feud these hunter gatherers lived as individual nations with unique language’s and customs whilst ever moving.
Why do the voice-overs stop? You are forced to choose: either read the sub-titles, or look at the images.
Interesting video, but would have been nice to be able to switch off the captions so I could actually see the thing.
If the life of the hunter-gatherer is so much better, why then were the greatest bottlenecks in human existence from way before agriculture was a thing?
We lived for to many years world wants us to die and even if we can survive our leaders arent fair i dont care if i die but we made the earth that way that it is now
I do not think any of the narrators is going to hunter-gather.
Just skip to 1:53 and a researcher points out the importance of animals and cereal grains.
The funny thing is that exactly thanks to agriculture that some people can waste their lives doing this kind of pointless research.
Soon they'll probably be asking themselves if math and medicine also ruined humanity.
Your post was pointless. The pros and cons of Neolithic revolution was clearly outlined in the video and the views of those scientists were very balanced. Only you cherry picked what you disliked and posted your pointless rant.
We wouldn't really need medicine with a daily life of physical activity, diverse food and non existence of chronic stress though.
@@sodalitia If the hunter and gathering is better why didn't succeed???? Why every nomadic society in the world did stuck in time?
@@rjnbonif3603 You just proved his point. The nomadic dont need to progress further they are self sufficient and self sustaining. They dont need speedy progression, they are content and successful. Our current global world system that you even mention is too heavy based on "forward progression' or as its termed, Growth. Which isnt something you can do in a finite world.
We need to revert
@@samthewham6671 Until you fell and broke your leg, or bitten by an insect and you got a fever and died or cutting yourself on a sharp rock and it got infected, yea, you're right we wouldn't need Medicines ...
Lol according to some religious books we were asked to leave the buffet.....
It's all been a terrible mistake. I'll play the Kinks' "Apeman" a few times before I pick out a family tree to descend from.Meet up in the great outdoors, it's back to the future we go.
Thank GOD they learned agriculture and practiced with all their hearts and minds. Foraging and hunting is a horrible way of ensuring food for the masses, while fighting other tribes not to invade your hunting and foraging grounds.
They think the Earth belongs to them and they want the useless eaters gone from their property. What do you think the great reset is?
The existence 'masses' is a consequence of agriculture, tbf.
@@organicfarm5524 and hallelujah for that.
They were just tribes not masses
It wasn't a mistake if solely for the possibility to listen to the music presented. If we could go back to a simpler life, I'd be first in line. But I often think I'm willing to forgive all the shortcomings and atrocities of civilization, just because it led to the orchestra.
All the atrocities of humanity arrived thanks to the "civilization"
Does anyone knows the music at 0:28 ?
I think that the development of densely populated mega cities is not sustainable. They demand that all food be produced somewhere else and delivered there. Somewhere between the best of hunters gatherers, and the worst of massive urban centers, is more people spread out across the land, involved in some types of agrarian processes. Small and mid sized communities so that no one is far from the soil and the forests.
With more and more people,I think that the resources that could sustain a hunter gatherer lifestyle would eventually become depleated.It seems that people had no choice.
Ur right but our current way won’t last forever either we’re already having shortage of land for agricultural reasons. We’re running out of space to farm
@@nathanhyde2946 I agree but it's lights out anyway when the last star sputters out.
Not having to wake up at 6 in the morning and to hunt for breakfast....you call that a mistake😅
TRICK is to live a hunter-gather lifestyle with the healthy advancements of man its a balancing act...
What's the name of the music at 0.22 ?
Nocturne op 9 no 2 Chopin
Ponderous. Thanks!
Colonial capitalism is the problem, not society.
This is NOT about morals. Its about HUMAN RIGHTS! Remember them?! They used to matter just like facts and science used to matter.
Very interesting
Your sound levels are all over the place!
Sa le multumim stramosilor nostri pentru cea ce stim!
Want to gather people to live the simple life like them in small group , withdraw from industrial pollution of our foods body and soul freedom.
It’s not mistake. It’s more like inevitable due to human constantly looking for more way to expands. Back then, same now. Expands at the cost of the weaker.
It's interesting that if you listened to Nocturne op 9 no. 2, this video will pop up in your recommendations
Probably because of the intro
I am not a hunter ,but a gattherer in shopping mall
BIGGEST MISTAKE: observing the media in any way.
Basically the same idea in the book Brief history of humankind by Harari.
The problem with Harari is that he never debates anyone, just lectures or talks in panels with everyone nodding their heads vigorously.
I think that it is highly likely that a change from wild meats, grubs, tubers, leaves, berries, etc to wheat (or Einkorn) ....complex carbohydrate types of food, as a much larger part of diet took its toll on
human bodies which did not evolve to process these newer and more easily available carbohydrate foods. Even today there seems to be a lot of diseases which can partially trace their origin back to
wheat and sugars.
What was the average lifespan of a hunter/gatherer?
Civilization's a bio-grinding machine. Grinding it all down to dioxin to nurture Young Sheldons and launch James Webb telescopes.
Agricultural led to the question of inheritance, which led to wars and whatever came in between. But we can’t take away the blessings of the time we are in because of the decisions our ancestors made. I can imagine living like the croods in a cave. But we should have a more inclusive and egalitarian society for the future generations.
I would say cutting trees down is worse.
song name at 0:30??
So, all of our societal problems started 10 thousand years ago!?!
We're all doomed!
Doesn’t matter, one way street:
“Until about the third millennium BC, there was no noticeable change in social patterns on any time scale measured in less than centuries. Around that time, the first permanent settlements that we’d recognize as towns arose, facilitated by the discovery of agriculture. With them appeared writing and codified law and the rudiments of government.
“From that time on, there was no turning back. An agricultural civilization can support far more people in a given area than a hunter-gatherer lifestyle- but the transition from a hunter-gatherer society to agriculture is strictly a one-way process. If you try to reverse it, most of your people will starve to death: they simply won’t be able to acquire enough food. This was the first of many such one-way processes in the historical record. Arguably, it’s the existence of these one-way transitions that gives rise to the appearance of inexorable historical progress; it’s not that reversals are impossible, it’s simply that after a reversal there’ll be nobody left to keep a written record of it.”
- Charles Stross, Introduction: After the Future Imploded, from Toast, p. 10.
We have evolved to a point where nature is less threatening than we are to ourselves. Woopie!
It's not ALL been good, except for the part of having to sleep on a tree and finding a deer every day, oh, and the part of dying from friggin caries...