I'm not exactly sure how to start this post other than to quote what was said in another post that made me think of it from Ghel's comment in "What Is A Miracle"
This statement seems to be based on a myth that has been perpetuated in pop-culture. That the life of priitive hunter/gatherer and hunter/gardener societies was "Nasty, brutish, and short" as they had to contend with "Nature, red in tooth and claw." While this simplistic view of ancient "stone age" people might be forgiven to a person living in the 1700's or 1800's who lacked both the evidence of both archeaology of the past, and the anthropology studies of the present with modern hunter/gatherer societies, this sort of ignorance should not be perpetuated today.
Researchers studying modern tribes have shown that on average, Hunter/Gatherers work significantly less time each day to aquire food, water, and materials for providing, shelter and clothing than a settled agriculturalist. Agriculture is, flat out, more work than hunting, fishing, and foraging. Yet the myth that the life of tribal peoples is "Savage, brutish, and short" persists in the face of overwhelming evidence that the hunting and gathering lifestyle is far more leisured than out own.
When I was 17, a friend handed me a book he was studying in his psychology class. Brian said they were studying the Eutopian Novel genre of literature as a way of identifying what a culture values. The first was "Utopia" by Sir Thomas Moore, published in 1516. The second was "Herland" by Charlotte Perkins, published in 1915. But the last was the one that captured my attention, "Ishmael" by Daniel Quinn, published in 1992. From that book, I found myself reading all of his books, as well as those on his suggested reading list. A few of those deal with the how's and whys of Tribal lifestyle.
"Stone Age Economics" by Marshal Sahlins, Described as "the classic study of the "Original Affluent Society".
"Limited Wants, Unlimmited Means: A Reader on Hunter-Gatherer Economics and the Environment", John Gowdy, Editor "For more than 99% of our history, human life has meant hunting-gathering life. If you want to know how this life worked, you can spend two or three years intensively browsing the anthropology shelves of your local library—or you can read Limited Wants, Unlimited Means: A Reader on Hunter-Gatherer Economics and the Environment. John Gowdy's book is a treasure, and I recommend it without reservation to all who want to know more about this tragically-neglected subject."
"Man's Rise to Civilization" by Peter Farb
"Stolen Continents: the Americas Through Indian Eyes Since 1492" by Ronald Wright.
"The Continuum Concept" by Jean Liedloff, which has in it's core a comparison between "Modern Civilized" people and modern "Primitive, Stone Age" people.
The rest of the "suggested reading list" can be found at http://www.ishmael.org/Education/Readings/ if anyone is interested.
From there I started to read about Tribal Hunter/Gatherer societies, first those mentioned in Quinn's books (Ishmael, The Story Of B, My Ishmael, Beyond Civilization, etc.) like The Gebusi tribe of Papua New Guinea, and the Yequana Tribe of Venezuela to the Kombai of West Papua and the Candoshi-Shapra of the Amazon (whom my friend's Ron and Karen visited with to learn their skills and document them in one of the instructional videos which won a Telly Award for Best Documentary).
Recently, as I've mentioned in other posts, I picked up a copy of "The Vegetarian Myth" by Lierre Keith that makes mention of Tribal people being shown in a variety of studies to be healthier and free of complaints common to "civilized" people who rely on modern agriculture to procure their food. Lierre mentions the Weston A. Price Foundation in her research in relation to the links between modern diet and various diseases that seem to plague civilization but are notably absent from indigenous peoples who are still being allowed to live their traditional lifestyles (and hence to eat their traditional diets).
There is abundant evidence, not the least of which are documentaries with "primitive" peoples themselves, that they do not live in constant fear nor do they spend "90% of their time looking for food."
Originally posted by Ghel
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Researchers studying modern tribes have shown that on average, Hunter/Gatherers work significantly less time each day to aquire food, water, and materials for providing, shelter and clothing than a settled agriculturalist. Agriculture is, flat out, more work than hunting, fishing, and foraging. Yet the myth that the life of tribal peoples is "Savage, brutish, and short" persists in the face of overwhelming evidence that the hunting and gathering lifestyle is far more leisured than out own.
When I was 17, a friend handed me a book he was studying in his psychology class. Brian said they were studying the Eutopian Novel genre of literature as a way of identifying what a culture values. The first was "Utopia" by Sir Thomas Moore, published in 1516. The second was "Herland" by Charlotte Perkins, published in 1915. But the last was the one that captured my attention, "Ishmael" by Daniel Quinn, published in 1992. From that book, I found myself reading all of his books, as well as those on his suggested reading list. A few of those deal with the how's and whys of Tribal lifestyle.
"Stone Age Economics" by Marshal Sahlins, Described as "the classic study of the "Original Affluent Society".
"Limited Wants, Unlimmited Means: A Reader on Hunter-Gatherer Economics and the Environment", John Gowdy, Editor "For more than 99% of our history, human life has meant hunting-gathering life. If you want to know how this life worked, you can spend two or three years intensively browsing the anthropology shelves of your local library—or you can read Limited Wants, Unlimited Means: A Reader on Hunter-Gatherer Economics and the Environment. John Gowdy's book is a treasure, and I recommend it without reservation to all who want to know more about this tragically-neglected subject."
"Man's Rise to Civilization" by Peter Farb
"Stolen Continents: the Americas Through Indian Eyes Since 1492" by Ronald Wright.
"The Continuum Concept" by Jean Liedloff, which has in it's core a comparison between "Modern Civilized" people and modern "Primitive, Stone Age" people.
The rest of the "suggested reading list" can be found at http://www.ishmael.org/Education/Readings/ if anyone is interested.
From there I started to read about Tribal Hunter/Gatherer societies, first those mentioned in Quinn's books (Ishmael, The Story Of B, My Ishmael, Beyond Civilization, etc.) like The Gebusi tribe of Papua New Guinea, and the Yequana Tribe of Venezuela to the Kombai of West Papua and the Candoshi-Shapra of the Amazon (whom my friend's Ron and Karen visited with to learn their skills and document them in one of the instructional videos which won a Telly Award for Best Documentary).
Recently, as I've mentioned in other posts, I picked up a copy of "The Vegetarian Myth" by Lierre Keith that makes mention of Tribal people being shown in a variety of studies to be healthier and free of complaints common to "civilized" people who rely on modern agriculture to procure their food. Lierre mentions the Weston A. Price Foundation in her research in relation to the links between modern diet and various diseases that seem to plague civilization but are notably absent from indigenous peoples who are still being allowed to live their traditional lifestyles (and hence to eat their traditional diets).
There is abundant evidence, not the least of which are documentaries with "primitive" peoples themselves, that they do not live in constant fear nor do they spend "90% of their time looking for food."
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