Richard Bulliet - History of the World to 1500 CE (Session 2) - Valley Civilizations 8000-1500 BC

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  • Опубликовано: 27 янв 2025

Комментарии • 169

  • @jamesp960
    @jamesp960 9 лет назад +63

    I googled the title of the book he was talking about near (32:30) it's called The Horse, the Wheel and the language by David Anthony

  • @veraruzh
    @veraruzh 4 года назад +14

    Thank you for sharing these brilliant lectures on the internet 🙏🏼 this is a pleasure to listen to such outstanding scholars!
    Many thanks from Russia

  • @lunadeargint540
    @lunadeargint540 4 года назад +12

    Old Europe; when I was in primary school in the 80's in Romania in my native little town on Danube - Oltenita, I visited the local history museum. It was dedicated to the old neolithic culture of Gumelnita (and Boian) and contained artefacts found in the villagages nearby. I still remember some fascinating ceramic objects, a skelleton and even some fossilised wheat. I read Gimbutas' book Civilization and Culture (Romanian title) later in the beginning of the 90s.

  • @CJ-nd9gg
    @CJ-nd9gg 5 лет назад +15

    Nooo! What was up with the flutes? I must know

  • @h0lmie
    @h0lmie 12 лет назад +11

    Annoyed by sound in just your left ear? Open VLC media player. Press Media > Open Network Stream. Paste the youtube link of the video, and press play. Once it is playing, right click on the screen and choose > Audio > Audio Channels > Left. And it will be mirrored in your right ear.

    • @Ragd0ll1337
      @Ragd0ll1337 8 лет назад

      Thank you!

    • @SrValeriolete
      @SrValeriolete 5 лет назад

      I thought my left phone had stoped working

    • @dylan9966
      @dylan9966 4 года назад

      Sadly this doesn't seem to work anymore. I think RUclips has done this intentionally.

    • @Ryhor_97869
      @Ryhor_97869 9 месяцев назад +1

      thanks a lot!

  • @comicsandfilmfan9077
    @comicsandfilmfan9077 8 лет назад +22

    great lecture! please advocate columbian professors to upload more videos like this with playlists for the course

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 3 года назад

      Yes! The world needs more Colombian Gold.

  • @coastwalker
    @coastwalker 14 лет назад +34

    The Horse, the Wheel, and Language:
    How Bronze-Age Riders from the Eurasian Steppes Shaped the Modern World
    David W. Anthony

    • @bbmtge
      @bbmtge 3 года назад

      Sucker.

    • @bolsasnara3746
      @bolsasnara3746 3 года назад

      thank you so much!

    • @Designer_TopG
      @Designer_TopG 2 года назад

      @@bolsasnara3746
      The girl in the front row is famous now. The blonde. Famous from this video lol . As students watch this , they check her out .

    • @tintin5341
      @tintin5341 Год назад

      @@Designer_TopG what's the name

  •  12 лет назад +3

    thanks.
    excellent and informative lecture from a distinguished historian .
    i like how he questions and opens up various accepted theories including those in his own textbook.
    -
    too bad that about 5 min(?) are missing from this session.

  • @gregg4
    @gregg4 9 лет назад +2

    Why does it end so abruptly?

  • @DK-cr7hn
    @DK-cr7hn 9 лет назад +2

    25:20 could anyone tell me please, what were ancient cities in Romania made up of? It sounds like 'gymnus/jimnus', I could not understand that word.

    • @DK-cr7hn
      @DK-cr7hn 9 лет назад

      +Teo Tucan thank you

    • @lisasafran8538
      @lisasafran8538 5 месяцев назад

      He said “gymnasts”, people doing gymnastics, was supposed to be a joke.

    • @lisasafran8538
      @lisasafran8538 5 месяцев назад

      He doesn’t speak very clearly. I only understand because I’ve lived in the US for over 40 years. I’ve learned the culture and language.

  • @Gettingitreal
    @Gettingitreal 4 года назад +1

    Please up sound quality

  • @brainphelps1994
    @brainphelps1994 6 лет назад +11

    why do we cut it off right when hes getting into neanderthals playing the flute?

    • @VanDeGraph
      @VanDeGraph 5 лет назад +23

      We weren't ready to know that. The Order of the Neanderthal Flutes will keep the knowledge safe until such a time arrives.

  • @BogdanLiviu7
    @BogdanLiviu7 Год назад +2

    25:22 - I am from Romania and I confirm. 😂

  • @christianeckstein3422
    @christianeckstein3422 12 лет назад +2

    not stereo? please...

  • @zorgonox8479
    @zorgonox8479 3 года назад +4

    I believe that an appropriate 'new narrative' is that Old Europe teaches us that civilization is not guaranteed. Perhaps a lesson we should be reminded of.

  • @ThenWhatever
    @ThenWhatever 13 лет назад +6

    Fantastic story about iranian settlement. It amazes me how funny it can be the concept of a human being stealing objects from an archeological sight, comparing it to make a copy of a book. Really, hearing no comments about this continous pillage that is being done in the name of archeology is frustrating.

    • @MelBee128
      @MelBee128 2 года назад

      Well that brings up the issue of who owns history. Society needs to decide what's more important. Retaining artifacts in popular tourist cities so humanity can learn where they came from? Or making sure that all artifacts remain in the care of the original country where they were found even if that means they could be destroyed by war or never studied because the nation has no interest or funds to put them in a museum? Unfortunately, many of the countries where artifacts are found are either torn apart by war, economically unstable, or corrupt. I'm sure they would love to be able to display artifacts and invite scholars from all over the world to come and study them but many of them are incapable of doing so. I remember during the Iraq War all those news reports of the Baghdad museum being bombed and thousands of artifacts being destroyed. Incidentally a lot of those early artifacts were left behind by people who were themselves colonizers. The Hittites, Akkadians, Egyptians, etc.

    • @tianatucker4870
      @tianatucker4870 Год назад

      I was just looking through the comments upon hearing that. I’m really enjoying the lecture but lightly comparing the theft of an ancient artifact to violation of copyright law is insane, and a weird tone to set for incoming students.

  • @InfiniteUniverse88
    @InfiniteUniverse88 10 лет назад +2

    I'd like to hear the size of the ancient city of 5,000 people in Romania compared with cities like Mohenjo-Daro, Uruk, and Jericho.

  • @jamesp960
    @jamesp960 9 лет назад +23

    Anyone else notice his pronunciation of "WHEAT" is similar to Stewie's on Family Guy.

  • @DK-cr7hn
    @DK-cr7hn 9 лет назад +17

    no offence, but is it such a big problem to buy a map in the US, so that a lecturer is forced to explain geography with hand drawn sketches?

    • @jimanderson29
      @jimanderson29 9 лет назад +3

      +Dmitry Korolyov Yea. That would be nice. I'm sure Columbia can afford real maps like most elementary schools have; don't know why he doesn't use them.

    • @songsmithy07
      @songsmithy07 9 лет назад

      My thoughts exactly.

    • @Ragd0ll1337
      @Ragd0ll1337 8 лет назад +3

      My thoughts exactly! Hand-drawn sketches are more confusing than helpful, however... maps are surprisingly more expensive than one would think.

    • @AlJalandhari
      @AlJalandhari 7 лет назад +1

      Also surprising is the fact that he's still using chalk and not a whiteboard. In fact why doesn't he use a projector and PowerPoint, this is surely he has to give this lecture more than once

    • @radicalantitheist
      @radicalantitheist 7 лет назад +8

      "this is surely he has to give this lecture more than once"
      have you been watching the previous lectures, he repeatedly says this is the first, and maybe the last time he is teaching this course.
      world history is a brand new course and this course is not even about the actual history, the point of all the particular bits of history he brings up are only to contrast and compare with the text book he helped write
      this is not a course about world history, this is a courses about the current problems with the idea of world history.
      p.s. pay even more attention and you will notice that 95% of the time he is lecturing entirely off the cuff with no notes at all

  • @bornforwater
    @bornforwater 13 лет назад +4

    0:01:45

  • @jimibeckert
    @jimibeckert 12 лет назад

    Fish would be the easiest to eat and catch ?

  • @woman-at-arms
    @woman-at-arms 26 дней назад

    "You certainly don't chew on muscle" - isn't meat primarily muscle???

  • @marksandsmith6778
    @marksandsmith6778 Год назад

    Did bullet just section his students that is harsh I didn't think they were that bad

  • @MatthewMcVeagh
    @MatthewMcVeagh 10 лет назад +8

    So what about these flutes then? Cut off.

    • @walker1812
      @walker1812 6 лет назад +5

      we weren't meant to know about the flutes.

    • @VanDeGraph
      @VanDeGraph 5 лет назад

      @@walker1812 The Forbidden Knowledge of the Neanderthal Flutes was the fruit Adam and Eve were tempted with

  • @michaelfebbert737
    @michaelfebbert737 2 года назад

    It may be anthropology
    I don't know

  • @iExamineLife
    @iExamineLife 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you 🙏

  • @carsons4896
    @carsons4896 2 года назад

    I need to find the end of this session. What I think he was suggesting at the very end, is that the desire to communicate was so strong, they (I mean.. we), literally willed the necessary physical requirements into place. Wow. Oprah was right. It's the flipping secret.

  • @Sh1nyboots
    @Sh1nyboots 14 лет назад +1

    Audio seems better in this video than the last, but still a bit to be desired.

  • @mohammedsajeed9398
    @mohammedsajeed9398 Год назад

    😊
    32:50
    Wheeled vehicles horses ,indo European origins.

  • @MorganScorpion
    @MorganScorpion 13 лет назад

    Wasn't he in The Blue Angel with Marlene Dietrich? He looks and stands awfully like Emil Jannings in that movie.

  • @Notmyrealnameanymore
    @Notmyrealnameanymore 5 месяцев назад

    More legit history lessons please!!

  • @benv7933
    @benv7933 5 лет назад +6

    Who else is using this to work on homework or fall asleep?

    • @lisasafran8538
      @lisasafran8538 5 месяцев назад

      Me to fall asleep. …no interest in any blondes. Certainly no interest in females. But one of sons does.

    • @lisasafran8538
      @lisasafran8538 5 месяцев назад

      Gosh did he get more boring since last time I listened. Could we talk any slower?

    • @lisasafran8538
      @lisasafran8538 5 месяцев назад

      It’s not that his topic is bad it’s his presentation that’s so darn slow and so monotone. Wow.

    • @lisasafran8538
      @lisasafran8538 5 месяцев назад

      How many umm’s can you person have? He clearly skipped the Toad Master classes or any public speaking classes. Strange that you can get a job at top University which such a terrible presentation. Amazing. 😮

  • @jrperez004
    @jrperez004 Год назад

    Dang. I woke up when the chairs moved. 😅

  • @shannkaray
    @shannkaray 5 лет назад +13

    this dude is insanely brilliant and wise

    • @MarcosElMalo2
      @MarcosElMalo2 3 года назад

      Perhaps, but this is an intro history course based on current knowledge (despite presence of graduate students).

    • @griffiend
      @griffiend Год назад

      @@MarcosElMalo2Have you listened to the lecture at all though lol

  • @bornforwater
    @bornforwater 13 лет назад +1

    He reminds me of my highschool World History teacher. :)

  • @LOKa-bg6qn
    @LOKa-bg6qn 3 года назад +1

    yeah, the cameraman must've been on the lookout for slick shoulders

  •  8 лет назад

    I enjoy the social scientist professors at Columbia over Yale and especially, Harvard.

  • @Rico-Suave_
    @Rico-Suave_ 2 года назад

    Watched all of it

  • @Zontago
    @Zontago 11 лет назад +1

    What is wrong with Jared Diamond?

  • @Gaby-gg6pj
    @Gaby-gg6pj 7 лет назад +4

    half of the recent comments are " b b b blone gril in the frOnT" and the other half are about his veganism comment

  • @CelticXAngel88
    @CelticXAngel88 11 лет назад +6

    Old school: no power point + dry lecture
    Exacerbated by zero voice inflection, awkward gesticulation and frequent "uh/ums"

    • @5Andysalive
      @5Andysalive 4 года назад +1

      Because Power Point makes it better? I agree with the rest.

    • @chadbrockman4791
      @chadbrockman4791 4 года назад +6

      Read all of his published work. No "ums" or gesticulation at all there. You won't, though, because the problem is your lack of attention and interest, not any of these excuses you make for your unwillingness to do 1/1000 of the intellectual work he's doing to understand what he's talking about. Maybe just watch TV.

    • @garyinspain
      @garyinspain Год назад

      @@chadbrockman4791 well said

  • @valeon7303
    @valeon7303 7 лет назад +1

    @5:08 wait what... he tried to not sound boring for once?!

  • @SapienSafari
    @SapienSafari 5 лет назад +2

    Lol they are talking while he is.

  • @paulsmith304
    @paulsmith304 10 месяцев назад

    There’s more uhs in this than a little pump song

  • @RagingBlast2Fan
    @RagingBlast2Fan 11 лет назад +7

    Richard seems not to understand that his thesis does not harm veganism, rather it supports it. The fact that humans _STARTED_ to eat meat, their teeth _STARTED_ to get smaller, and their intenstines _STARTED_ to get shorter, ALL unanimously imply that we were originally vegans, who, at some point decided to eat meat for some of the benefits that it offers. Perhaps at that time we really needed the nutrients and it was easier to eat by meat. It was of no concern to them that they might at some point experience disease that is commonly associated with the consumption of meat simply because they didn't get old enough for the negative side of a meat-based diet to appear. I don't know how he missed it, but from what he has said he hasn't harmed by veganism, rather I feel comfortable knowing that my choice is not only ethical, but appeals to what we, as a species, were designed to eat.

    • @drkent3
      @drkent3 10 лет назад +15

      You seem to not understand that Richard is not talking about HUMANS at this point, but hominid species that we evolved from. In other words, since humans have evolved from that time, ingesting all of the necessary nutrients and calories from plants is much more difficult and requires careful preplanning. Meat doesn't cause disease, it is overeating as well as antibiotics and hormones used to increase production that causes problems. If meat caused early death, our hominid ancestors would have lived a longer life than we do - and that simply isn't the case.

  • @michaelfebbert737
    @michaelfebbert737 2 года назад +1

    I'm sorry
    How is this a history lecture?

  • @pacifiquebusiness
    @pacifiquebusiness Год назад

    🦁💙👩‍🎓

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    Tô indo pro hospital aqui esperando aqui fora de um pedido para mim ir lá no centro de um beijo e é o almoço de ontem e é o cafezinho da tarde

  • @flxnioo
    @flxnioo 3 года назад +3

    Who else searched up "Boring Video's" for sleep, Right?

  • @lisasafran8538
    @lisasafran8538 5 месяцев назад

    This is why I became a science major, these kinda lectures were too slow and boring for my brain to stay awake, I’m here to fall asleep. Wished I was stoned and asleep now. 😮

  • @aboriginal.man.1492
    @aboriginal.man.1492 Год назад

    THE FUTURE COULD BE BRIGHT
    Planetary degradation - The anthropocene, the current era and predicament we are all in, included are the animals, and incase no one noticed, the earth as well.
    Historically humans have been eating animals, but nevertheless, in the past humans have also been eating plants as well, humans have been in comparison to other animals, have been notoriously industrious, to a point where in modern times we have altered and influence the natural world, heading towards a potentially disastrous situation, where industrial civilization has become an existential threat to all life on the planet.

    There is one industry that is destroying our planet and our ability to thrive on her, it is the leading cause of everything. Climate change. Ocean dead zones. Fisheries depletion. Species extinction. Deforestation. World hunger. Food safety. Heart disease. Obesity. Diabetes, and the list goes on. There is one issue at the heart of all these global problems that is too often overlooked. It is the demand for and reliance on animal products.
    Animal agriculture is only one industry that is causing a great deal of damage, to the environment-the natural world, free-living animals and indigenous peoples and their cultures, the meat industry derived from invasive cultures and these invasive cultures have colonized and implanted themselves in many countries all over the world. And one of the only ways to combat this is by boycotting the meat industry, this is the least we can do in order to adapt to this dysfunctional situation created by these invasive cultures. As for the other industries imposed by these invasive cultures, well there are many organization going up against these destructive industries, but the meat industry is one that is overlooked, even by groups and or communities who have been heavily and negatively impacted by industrial society.

  • @sandwich675
    @sandwich675 7 лет назад +2

    'uh'

  • @williambatts79
    @williambatts79 9 лет назад +3

    This guy sounds like Ross of friends - maybe he decided to go into education...

  • @faykellytuncay9361
    @faykellytuncay9361 9 лет назад +4

    Polar bears have black skin under their white fur.

  • @TuanLeKreuk
    @TuanLeKreuk 9 лет назад +30

    I was distracted with the blonde at the front, wondering what her face looks like.

  • @CrypticConversions
    @CrypticConversions 4 года назад +2

    It was interesting listening to this guy bloviate about how this is a top tier school in the first lecture, which I left early, and then deliver a lecture that had me pulling my hair out. I listened until 11:44 and had to leave because, well, uh uh uh, he couldn't complete one sentence uh uh uh without inserting uh uh uh, "uh uh uh."

  • @pandarescue
    @pandarescue 8 месяцев назад

    Hum hum hmm hum hmm bananas! 😂

  • @matthewdevereux1288
    @matthewdevereux1288 10 лет назад +3

    bulliet train

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    E o almoço de ontem foi muito difícil né mas é o cafezinho tava precisando muito muito sucesso e o cafezinho tava precisando de alguma novidade da vida de vcs e de e é o almoço de ontem e é só no centro da cidade mesmo né mas é o almoço de ontem e é só

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    R viu o almoço de hoje e o almoço de hoje né a gente vê o valor de um beijo no coração e o cafezinho tava precisando muito muito sucesso sempre vcs vão ficar rico e o cafezinho tava no forno e o

  • @olivebranch7148
    @olivebranch7148 5 лет назад +1

    What a patience of the studentssss great

  • @daneculp4731
    @daneculp4731 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing this lecture but...
    this is a college professor.
    A college professor should set an example.
    His use of umms and uhs is overwhelming.
    Every sentence that he speaks has at least one umm and or uh.
    I found myself more concentrated on counting his umms than the lecture.

    • @garyinspain
      @garyinspain Год назад

      haven't you anything better to do than make puerile comments if you dont umm like it uh do something else

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    D fui no banheiro e é o cafezinho da tarde para você também e é só r o almoço de ontem foi muito difícil de ir embora e é só r o almoço amanhã às três dias para o almoço

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    Fe da casa da tia Maria e a noite toda hora de dormir um pouquinho de casa e o cafezinho tava no centro de um beijo no coração de Deus no comando e é o almoço de ontem e é o cafezinho tava precisando de alguma coisa e o cafezinho da tarde e a noite toda hora ri demais e o almoço de

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    Fé no senhor Jesus Cristo e é o cafezinho tava no forno de casa e o almoço de ontem foi muito difícil de ir embora e o cafezinho tava precisando muito de mim e é só r o almoço de ontem e é só r o cafezinho tava

  • @tornado1789
    @tornado1789 7 лет назад +2

    Knowing something is a thing, and teaching that thing is something else! This professor does really need to take courses of how to give lectures

  • @unclelumbago_1899
    @unclelumbago_1899 7 лет назад +1

    Ehhhhh kill me we're are the dinosaurs

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    F da vida e é só r viu o cafezinho tava precisando muito muito sucesso e o almoço de ontem foi embora e o cafezinho tava precisando muito muito sucesso sempre vcs vão vir embora agora a noite a

  • @LouCadle
    @LouCadle 2 года назад

    skip the first class and come here. It's a shame this guy didn't know about slides. Not everyone is an aural learner.

  • @jamesm.3967
    @jamesm.3967 3 года назад

    Looks like some co Ed action in this class. 😉

  • @jaredeckify
    @jaredeckify 5 лет назад +5

    He has such a rambling way of lecturing that it's difficult to follow his point in between anecdotes on dog restaurants in the Olympics and the like.

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    D ER r viu o almoço amanhã às três horas da tarde para você e o cafezinho tava no forno e é o almoço de ontem foi embora e é só no centro da cidade de São Paulo e é só

  • @pbaklamov
    @pbaklamov Год назад +1

    Even more boring than the Rabbis! Thank you! ❤

  • @AlJalandhari
    @AlJalandhari 7 лет назад +1

    The Russians were successful in domesticating foxes though

    • @bredmond812
      @bredmond812 6 лет назад

      You mean within the past few decades, right? Up in siberia? That is what I read a few weeks ago.

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    T um pouco então né né se fala comigo no grupo de casa da empresa agora no centro de um pedido de casamento da casa da tia Ana Paula da casa de vcs vão ficar rico e o almoço de hoje e o

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    D ER r viu o almoço de hoje né a noite toda hora ri demais e é o almoço de hoje e o cafezinho tava precisando muito muito sucesso e é só r viu o almoço de hoje e o cafezinho da manhã de manhã r viu se encontra lá ER no grupo de casa e o almoço de ontem e o almoço de ontem

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    R viu o almoço de hoje e o almoço de ontem foi muito difícil de ir no centro de casa e o almoço de ontem e é o cafezinho da tarde e é só r viu o cafezinho tava precisando muito de um beijo e

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    Só r viu o almoço de hoje né a noite a gente se encontra lá ER hoje e o almoço de ontem e o almoço amanhã de manhã r viu se encontra no shopping né a noite toda hora de dormir aqui e é o almoço de hoje né se fala

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    R viu o almoço de ontem foi embora e o cafezinho da tarde e é o almoço de hoje e é só no é o cafezinho tava precisando muito de um beijo e o cafezinho tava no centro de um beijo e é só r o cafezinho tava precisando de alguma novidade sobre as crianças e

  • @MelBee128
    @MelBee128 2 года назад

    Enough about the hydrology. Come on man. Remember that there are actual people that have are listening to this.

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    Gu vc no centro da casa de um beijo no rosto de vcs vão ficar rico né amiga e o almoço de hoje né a noite a gente se encontra lá no grupo de um pedido para todos vcs estão no trabalho da gente se encontra no shopping né amiga da vida de vcs vão

  • @jatindsaini
    @jatindsaini 3 года назад +1

    So sad, I use these videos for sleeping

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    R viu o cafezinho tava no forno de casa e o almoço de ontem foi muito boa tarde e é o almoço de hoje né a noite a todos da casa da tia Ana Paula da vida de vcs vão vir embora e é só r

  • @ninja21222
    @ninja21222 8 лет назад +6

    he talks a lot of untruths. he ascertains that the reason our dentition narrowing was due to us eating meat, simply not true, this is when we started cooking this not only softened food but made the nutrients more bio-available to be digested, raw foods have more nutrients but we can't digest it easily. We are actually biologically a herbivorous species but that is another point, but to give a few pointers for you to research, all herbivores sweat to cool themselves but carnivores and omnivores pant-if still too hot they wallow, herbivores suck water to drink, carnivores and omnivores lap up drink, all herbivores have sideways moving jaws to grind foods and all carnivores and omnivores can only move their jaws up and down, herbivores all chew their foods before swallowing but carnivores and omnivores tear food then swallow in a gulping action-no chewing etc I could go on and on....
    He broaches the topic of racism in 19th century 'scholars' and then goes on to claim the origins of history lies 'in old europe' with whites 5000years ago, which is not true either. search for Catal huyuk which is 9,000years old and pre agricultural with multi-storey buildings, art, luxury goods etc look up Gobleki Tepe too if you want true information about proto history in neolithic man. These sites are in southern Anatolia in modern day Turkey. There seems to be a lot of politics in ancient history, the egyptologists rejected the truths of genuine ages-ancient egypt is way older than egyptologists wanted to admit, part of this I guess is that 'the experts' suddenly are wrong and rather than learn the truth it is easier to dismiss and discredit the new information then embrace truth and learning, the basis of learning especially science is 'we're pretty sure this is wrong, but it's the best we've got right now, so we'll run with it until a better one comes along' :)

    • @ashennell
      @ashennell 8 лет назад +3

      You're wrong about us being herbivorous. We are adapted to an omnivorous diet. Dental narrowing may have been due to a change in diet to cooked foods or to eating more meat, probably both. There is plenty of evidence of an increase in meat consumption.

    • @domisthebomb09
      @domisthebomb09 6 лет назад

      Found the picky vegan

    • @Natureorganica
      @Natureorganica 4 года назад +1

      Most primates are omnivorous and they sweat, drink via suction, chew their food etc.
      Also snakes are purely carnivorous and definitely dont lap up their water, they can move their jaw however they like, and they dont sweat nor pant for that matter because they're reptilian.
      So the biggest "untruth" here is you lumping all carnivores and omnivores into the same category and then saying it reflects humans being herbivores.

    • @ninja21222
      @ninja21222 4 года назад

      @@Natureorganica
      My apologies Benji.
      I failed to specify "mammals" in my comments. I wasn't talking about worms, slugs, ants etc or birds or reptiles etc just mammals of which we belong....
      Humans have always eaten other humans when circumstances force us to, and it is understood by sailors worldwide. But this is not their "normal behavior".
      Primates generally are not omnivores and they are now being recorded as hunting, killing and eating other primates-this is a reflection of our destroying their habitat.
      Chimps have learned that they can now ear poisonous plants as long as they go and steal charcoal from the loggers and eat this too, then they won't get sick or die... But these are forced behaviors, not natural.

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    T amo tanto a noite toda hora de dormir aqui e é o almoço de hoje e é o almoço de hoje e o almoço amanhã às noite e é só r o almoço e é só r o cafezinho da manhã de manhã r da manhã de um beijo e o almoço de ontem foi muito difícil né e o cafezinho tava precisando muito de mim ir no mercado e o cafezinho da manhã

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    R viu o almoço de hoje né se fala comigo no grupo de casa e é o almoço de hoje e é só r o almoço e é só r o almoço e o almoço amanhã de um beijo e o almoço de hoje e é o cafezinho

  • @odysseus1220
    @odysseus1220 5 лет назад +1

    Uh

  • @konstantyrutkowski1059
    @konstantyrutkowski1059 4 месяца назад

    Dogs are nothing special to eat. Interesting to taste but mutton is much better

  • @iceyred6668
    @iceyred6668 2 года назад

    Columbria State ofrTz'x state of artunj'v //nd.D

  • @marciamarquene5753
    @marciamarquene5753 Год назад

    é

  • @iceyred6668
    @iceyred6668 2 года назад

    Columbria State ofrTz'x state of artunj'v

  • @lisasafran8538
    @lisasafran8538 4 месяца назад

    This is Graduate School? Scary. Leave your brain at home. So glad I took Science classes and went to medical school.

  • @brotherronardo6766
    @brotherronardo6766 5 лет назад +2

    I feel sorry about everyone came here to learn, but I'm here to make myself fall asleep, I major in fine art. So....

    • @joycelilyandrewes8667
      @joycelilyandrewes8667 5 лет назад

      If you're interested in art but want to learn about world history, there's plenty of educational resources that attempt to combine the two subjects. I'd recommend BBC 2's Civilisations (2018).

  • @iceyred6668
    @iceyred6668 2 года назад

    den'iare synony, //nd.D

  • @sammytob2339
    @sammytob2339 3 года назад +5

    great lecture but am unappreciative of the unnecessary micropunches he throws at animal rights. in 100 years, he will probably be seen as having been close minded. a shame for his own legacy, because he is otherwise brilliant.

    • @Bestmann3n
      @Bestmann3n 3 года назад +4

      he comes off as an arrogant bully.

  • @pauladkins9829
    @pauladkins9829 4 года назад +2

    All he can say is ah bla bla bla ah bla bla ah ah

  • @panasuave
    @panasuave 7 лет назад +1

    booooring...

    • @chadbrockman4791
      @chadbrockman4791 4 года назад +2

      If you have no attention span. Not really his problem, though.

  • @indianmilitary
    @indianmilitary 11 лет назад +2

    what about HIS STORY (God's story) and timeline before 8000 BC? hehe
    According to a recent racial study (The History and Geography of Human Genes by Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza, Paolo Menozzi and Alberto Piazza ), it has been confirmed that all people of Europe, the Middle East, and India belong to a single Caucasian type race. This means that they had to have come from the same source. Thus, we are all descendants of this great Hindu/ Vedic culture, the center of which is India.
    Let us look at Vedic proof (Oldest spiritual and scientific books of Hindu/Vedic civilization) and migration of Hindus/vedic kings/seers/sages to other parts of the world between 15,000 BC to 8000 BC.
    “There are eighteen Puranas and sub-Puranas in Sanskrit. According to them, only those who settled on the high mountains of Central Asia and around the Caspian Sea, after the end of the fourth ice age, survived from the glaciers and deluge. During the period from the end of the fourth ice age and the great deluge, there were 12 great wars for the mastery over the globe. They divided the global regions into two parts. The worshipers of the beneficial forces of nature, or Devas, settled from the Caspian Sea to the eastern ocean, and the worshipers of the evil forces of nature occupied the land to the west of the Caspian Sea. These became known as the Assyrians (Asuras), Daityas (Dutch), Daiteyas (Deutch or German), Danavas (Danes), and Danutusahs (Celts). Some of them migrated to the American continent. The Mayans, Toltecs, and the rulers of Palanque (Patalalanke), are considered to be the Asuras who migrated to the Patala (land below), or the land of immortals, Amaraka.
    Knapp, Stephen (2000-02-01). Proof of Vedic Culture's Global Existence
    India/Hindu/Vedic civilization is the mother of all civilizations.
    Let us look at another proof through Hindu/Vedic divine language Sanskrit and why it is the mother of all languages?
    Shalome
    Sanskrit: Ishalayam, "The abode of God". Ishalayam - shalayam - shalome.
    Jerusalem
    Sanskrit: Yadu-isha-layam - The township of Lord Krishna. Yadu - dynasty of Lord Krsna, Isha - God, alayam - abode or place.
    Judaism
    Sanskrit: Yaduism - The Yadu dynasty which Lord Krishna appeared in. It is common for the y and j to become interchangeable hence, Yaduism, Yeduism and finally Judaism.
    Israel
    Sanskrit: Ishwaralaya, "The abode of Isha - God".
    Sanskrit: Palustin (Vedic sage) -> Palestine
    Abraham
    Sanskrit: Brahma, "Vedic God".
    Vaivasvata Manu, whose original name was Satyavrata, is the 7th Manu and considered the first king to rule this earth, who saved humanity from the great flood - after being warned of it by the Matsya avatar of Vishnu, who had also advised him to build a giant boat. The story is mentioned in early Hindu scriptures such as the Satapatha Brahmana, and it has often been compared with the popular traditions of a Great Deluge from other cultures around the world, particularly that of Noah's Ark.
    We are all descendants of Manu (Common ancestor) - The King and Hindu seer of Vedic/Hindu civilization. Manu's descendants were Pauravas, Ayu, Nahusha, and Yayati.
    Yayati had 5 sons and this vedic clan spread to other parts of the world
    1. The Purus (Paurava dynasty) were the Rigvedic people and developed Vedic culture in north central India and the Punjab along the Sarasvati (Rig-veda 7.96.2).This clan later went on to Egypt who became the Pharaohs and rulers of the area
    2. The Anus (Who also started Mleccha or Greek dynasty) of southern Kashmir along the Parushni or modern Ravi River (Rigveda 7.18.13) spread over western Asia and developed the various Iranian cultures.Thus, the ancient Greeks were once a part of Bharata-varsa (India) and the Vedic civilization. But later the people gave up their affiliation with Vedic society and were, therefore, classified as Mlecchas.However, in the Vana-parva section of the Mahabharata it is predicted that this non-Vedic society would one day rule much of the world, including India. Alexander the Great invaded northern India for the Pulinda or Greek civilization in 326 BCE, fulfilling the prophecy.
    3. The Druhyus (who started Bhoja dynasty) northwest of the area of the Punjab and Kashmir spread into Europe and became the western Indo-Europeans,or the Druids or Ancient Celts A first group went northwest and developed the proto-Germanic dialect, and another group traveled farther south and developed the proto-Hellenic and Itallic-Celtic dialects.
    4. Yadu was the originator of the Yadu dynasty called the Yadavas, later known as the Lunar Dynasty. Yayati was deified as Yahweh by the descendants of Yadu who are identified with the Yadus, the Jews of the present day.
    5. Turvasu came the Yavana or Turk dynasty. Another province mentioned in Mahabharata (Adi-parva 85.34) is that of the Yavanas (Turks) who were so named for being descendants of Maharaja Yavana (Turvasu), one of the sons of Maharaja Yayati, They also gave up Vedic culture and became Mlecchas. They fought in the battle of Kuruksetra against the Pandavas on behalf of Duryodhana and lost.
    These Aryan tribes, originating in India by King Yayati and mentioned in the Rig-veda and Vishnu and Bhagavata Puranas, spread all over the world.
    Source - Rig Veda/Atharva veda (World's oldest spiritual and scientific book of Hindu/Vedic/.Dharmic civilization
    other tribes of vedic culture who migrated outside India
    The Vishnu Purana (4.3.18-21) also mentions the Shakas who are the Scythians of ancient Central Asia, the Pahlavas who are the Persians, and the Cinas who are the Chinese
    I can go on like this for every civilization the world had seen
    1. Bhumi (Indian sanskrit word for earth) -> Humi and Humus -> Humans
    we are humus beings or bhumi beings.
    2. Sanskrit: Amaraka (land of immortals) -> America (both North and South)
    3. Sanskrit: Brihat-sthan (Great land or Island) -> Britain. In course of time Brihatsthan was corrupted to Britain in popular speech. That Britain itself signified ‘the Great’ isles was forgotten but the memory of ‘greatness’ persisted while the Sanskrit connotation was forgotten. That led to the addition of the objective ‘Great’ which explains the current name Great Britain.The term Anglo-Saxon is Sanskrit ‘Angla Saka Sunuh’ implying the descendants of the Sakas in England. Surnames like Peterson, Anderson, Jacobson are of the Sanskrit, Hindu tradition of describing a person as son of such and such. In some cases the English ending ‘Son’ is the earlier Hindu ending ‘Sen’. Thus Anderson is the English corruption of the Hindu name indrasen. Ireland is Arya Sthan and Scotland is Kshatra-sthan. Wales in Sanskrit signifies a seaside region.
    The Hindu temples abounded in ancient Britain when Vedic culture pervaded the West. It has been already explained above that place-names ending in ‘shire’ testify to the existence of Shiva temples. Ancient Hindu temples lie in unrecognizable ruins throughout Great Britain and Ireland. Christian fanaticism prevents modern European scholars from publicizing them. One such famous temple existed on the Hill of Tara, alias Taragarh, (in today’s Indian parlance), in Ireland. The Hill of Tara consequently a sacred site on which Sanskrit-speaking Hindu Kshatriya kings used to be crowned for centuries. A 5000 years-old Vedic temple was discovered late in 1997 A. D. in Stanton Drew village in Somerset.
    Another famous temple is the wel-known stonehenge. It has been carbon-dated to be of 2000 B. C. The temple has astronomical marking to chart the raising and setting of the sun and moon. Its presiding deity used to be taken in a procession to the Avon river three miles away. The deity was so consecrated as to be illumined by the rising sun’s rays on the longest day. These are all hindu Vedic traditions. Ancient churches throughout Great Britain and Europe are astronomically oriented which proves that they are captured Hindu temples since Hindus were the only people known to be shaping their lives day after day on astronomical considerations at that remote age. The information about the Stonehenge and its above-mentioned implications is recorded in the Encyclopedia Britannica.
    Godfrey Higgin’s book titled “The Celtic Druids” leads valuable evidence indicating that Hindu had colonized the British isles long before the Roman conquest. That book, published in 1829 A. D. is available in the British Museum library in London. Under Roman rule London was known as Londonium. This is a corruption of the much ancient Sanskrit terms Nondanium signifying a pleasing place.
    4.Sanskrit: Devaneshwar (Land of gods) -> Devonshire
    5.Sanskrit: Ramstan, ("Place of Lord Rama) -> Ramstein
    6. Sanskrit: Daityasthan, "Land of the Daityas" -> Deutchland
    7. Sanskrit: Sharman (Common hindu surname) -> German
    8. Sanskrit: Palustin (Vedic sage) -> Palestine
    9. Sanskrit: Skanda + Naviya ->Skanda is the son of Lord Siva. Naviya is Sanskrit for naval settlement. Scandinavians were the mariner descendants of the Vedic ksatriyas who worshipped Skanda.
    10. Sanskrit: Moksha (Salvation) -> Moscow
    11. Sanskrit: Astral-alaya, "(Land of the missiles)".- Australia
    12. Jerusalem
    Sanskrit: Yadu-isha-layam - The township of Lord Krsna. Yadu - dynasty of Lord Krsna, Isha - God, alayam - abode or place.
    13. Judaism
    Sanskrit: Yaduism - The Yadu dynasty which Lord Krsna appeared in. It is common for the y and j to become interchangeable hence, Yaduism, Yeduism and finally Judaism.
    14. Israel
    Sanskrit: Ishwaralaya, "The abode of Isha - God".
    15. Soviet
    Sanskrit: Svet, "White as in white snow covered region".
    16. Russia
    Sanskrit: Rishiya, "Land of the Rishis".
    17. Shalome
    Sanskrit: Ishalayam, "The abode of God". Ishalayam - shalayam - shalome.
    18. Adam
    Sanskrit: aadim, "The first or most ancient man".
    19. Abraham
    Sanskrit: Brahma, "Vedic God".
    20. Korea
    Sanskrit: Gauriya, "Gouri, Vedic Goddess".
    21. Danube river
    Sanskrit: Danuv - the Daityas were also known as the Danuv community due to Kashyapa munis marriage to Danu, who is also known as one of the primary Goddesses of the celts.
    22. England
    Sanskrit: Angulistan - Angulistan-Anguliand-England.
    23. Egypt
    Sanskrit: Ajapati - Lord Rama, the illustrious scion of Aja. Their kings were named Ramses meaning Rama the God.
    24. Stein
    Sanskrit: Stan, "Place".
    25. Siberia
    Sanskrit: Shibeerya, "The locals still call their land Shibir".
    26. Caspean sea
    Sanskrit: Kashyapa muni, "Named after the Vedic sage".
    Indian/Vedic/Dharmic civilization is the mother of all civilizations.
    Indian sanskrit - the mother of all languages. Hindu/vedic people migrated to Europe, central asia, Asia, Africa, Russia and other places Vedic civilization was the pre-eminent culture and faith of the entire world in ancient times. It was also prevalent throughout the Pacific region from India to Malaysia, Indonesia, Borneo, Korea, Indochina, the Philippines, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and farther east and up to Mexico.
    Eventually, descendants of Hindu/vedic people outside India,, lost touch with their Hindu/vedic traditions.
    India was the motherland of our race, and Sanskrit the mother of European languages. She was the mother of our philosophy … of our mathematics … of the ideals embodied in Christianity … of self government and democracy…mother India is in many ways the mother of us all.
    - William Durant. Author of the ten volume, story of civilization.
    Only a few open-minded people who look at the whole picture will understand the inherent unity the world and what its history contains. Such unity is disturbed only by mankind’s immature, dogmatic, and self-centered feelings for regional and cultural superiority. We have seen this in the propaganda that was effectively used by the Nazis and is presently used by neo-Nazis and white supremacist groups who now employ the modern myth that the original location of the Aryan race was in northern Europe.
    Knapp, Stephen (2000-02-01). Proof of Vedic Culture's Global Existence

    • @wdh1550
      @wdh1550 11 лет назад

      *****
      i will, i like it

    • @michaelwright9432
      @michaelwright9432 9 лет назад +1

      kashsoldier Thanks for the history lesson, PROFESSOR.

    • @erikhesjedal3569
      @erikhesjedal3569 6 лет назад

      That was quite an interesting perspective. Thanks !

  • @ernestswazo3215
    @ernestswazo3215 Год назад

    First he sets up a false narrative.

  •  8 лет назад +2

    Poor Professor, big blond distraction in the front row...