The lighting and the shirt keeps making me think I'm watching an early episode of Star Trek.
@toby9999 Жыл бұрын
Haha... same thought as soon as I saw it. Fortunately not red. They tend to not last the full duration.
@wolfgangbeeber208610 ай бұрын
Ensign Tiberius Pike
@petercontarino6469 ай бұрын
LOL. My first impression also.
@ulises64429 ай бұрын
also the content, specially for og star trek haha
@thastinger3459 ай бұрын
He better hope he doesn't beam down with Kirk, spock and bones...cause if he does, he ain't coming back
@2006HUGO2 жыл бұрын
BBC used to do good stuff like this. They may still do but BBC NEWS and politics have damaged their reputation. I don't switch the TV on
@jerrywatt6813 Жыл бұрын
You're so right I can see old BBC docs on KZbin and they are extrordinarie ! Here in LA I stopped watching the boob tube a decade ago it's a waste land of political brainwashing ! Cheers
@sebastienloyer9471 Жыл бұрын
LoL I gaved mine away. No TV ever again. No radio. Skipping all adds Really choosing what I listen to.
@patriciacollier128 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely, me too.
@Jaysonbc1234 Жыл бұрын
100% spot on
@markb8468 Жыл бұрын
With one exception.....I do like some sports. Otherwise TV is nearly unwatchable.
@philmccavity10 ай бұрын
In a world of uncouth loud braying, it's always so refreshing to hear nuanced, carefully tuned replies full of empathy towards opposing viewpoints. Many scientists even fail to embue their criticism with such grace.
@shripperquats58729 ай бұрын
You'll find the "uncouth braying" we collectively give out (at least, the worst of us) is a 'design' or the result of malicious designs that disassembled what should have been graceful conversation, but has been reduced to political pop-media madness. This 'design' or set of designs are inclined to all things horrible like greed lust egoism selfishness etc... we don't worship the loved one or even the self, we worship the pleasure and the dollar.
@jackcassedy99616 ай бұрын
@@shripperquats5872that was so eloquent… and beautiful.
@Dan-mm1yl5 ай бұрын
I JUST FARTED
@Kahneq3 ай бұрын
@@jackcassedy9961truly
@notme98162 ай бұрын
@@Dan-mm1yl Thanks bro.
@Bisquick Жыл бұрын
_"The ultimate hidden truth of the world is that it is something we make and could just as easily make differently."_ - the late great David Graeber
@faizanrana2998 Жыл бұрын
Aaaa hahaha aaaahaaa
@perjanuschas8050 Жыл бұрын
Quite frankly this was just plain boring...
@m1tanker391 Жыл бұрын
The great awakening of the people is close and the world will be very different once that occurs. The deceived will rise against their deceivers.
@jmsjms296 Жыл бұрын
@@m1tanker391 🥱
@WmTyndale11 ай бұрын
FALSE "all the ways of a fool are right in his own eyes"
@archivist17 Жыл бұрын
The discussions between the two Davids must have been mind-blowing. What a shame they couldn't both be here to be interviewed. But thank you Aaron, for introducing us to this intelligent, softly spoken, and insightful author and academic.
@shandytorok259 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, they blew each others' minds....so no mind left.....damn..........such a pity............
@johncaccioppo1142 Жыл бұрын
@@shandytorok259 If you want a more useful criticism, you can borrow this one: "Graeber and Wengrow, with Dawn of Everything, have consummated in an epic gish gallop of both naivete and arrogance in pretending to be anthropologists, misrepresenting and mischaracterizing the actual body of work and scholars in the field to such an extent as to completely destroy their own credibility forevermore. While pretending to take a liberal stance on "options for governance" they jettison the condition-based analysis of primitive societies in favor of post-modernist perspectives on freedom of choice in governance, an oxymoron of colossal proportions. Whether the intention was to author a new Bible for fascists or merely line their pockets I have little doubt that they have left their souls impoverished as a consequence. (RIP Mr. Graeber, I pray your intents exceeded your efforts, regardless of moral direction.) Unfortunately, those unfamiliar with the field will be courted endlessly by their rigorous contempt for authentic scholarship, painting experts as unilaterally patriachal (except for, Thank Marx, them), and such readers will undoubtedly swoon in their ignorance and hypnotic effect under such sophistry... as I was... before getting a friendly bump towards more experienced research and analysis." ~me and definitely not ChatGPT
@eclecticapoetica3 ай бұрын
The Dawn of Everything has been recommended to me by my Tutor in Archaeology and Ancient History. It’s my second undergraduate degree in Archaeology, the first was in Australian Prehistory. Well before the publication of Dark Emu, there was a burgeoning of evidence that our concept of simple Hunter gatherers trapped in some primitive, as yet unevolved, state was simply not sustainable. I I’m so glad that the big questions are finally being asked archaeologists.
@MikeWilliams-asecretcountryАй бұрын
You forgot to mention that Dark Emu was BS and Pascoe is not aboriginal."Farmers or Hunter-gatherers?: The Dark Emu Debate'+ Dark emu exposed....
@BGeezy4sheezyАй бұрын
There’s just so little material evidence from those times that it’s all speculation, and often outright fantasy. People have always been really clever though; to be human is to be sophisticated.
@yuuka926Ай бұрын
@@MikeWilliams-asecretcountry i was going to say the exact same thing. Dark emu is a work of historical fiction
@jameschappelow4952 Жыл бұрын
As a retired History and Politics teacher I am happy to say that I have rarely enjoyed a discussion so much. I ordered a copy of the. Book this morning and it arrived tonight. Sorry, I should have visited an independent book shop but I could not wait. Very inspirational. Thank you.
@lvr526611 ай бұрын
Buy another one at the local bookshop and return that one to the multinational.
@lettersquash11 ай бұрын
@@lvr5266 Where I live, one can also borrow books from libraries and save trees.
@PazLeBon11 ай бұрын
@@lettersquash close them all down nowadays
@lettersquash10 ай бұрын
@@ct-gt2dt I'm pretty sure you don't understand supply and demand. You don't think printers estimate how many books people are going to buy before they do a run? Your argument is like saying when you buy a computer at the shop it's already been built in runs in a factory, so we can ignore the plastics and metals used and the carbon dioxide that's been released to the atmosphere. It's an idiotic argument.
@Voots710 ай бұрын
I knew a guy named piss balloon.
@waza987 Жыл бұрын
The problem with theories like this that radically depart from the conventional wisdom is that almost everyone reacts to them in the wrong way. There are some that jump on immediately wholeheartedly and a a lot who reject out of hand. Most of these types of theories will turn out to be incorrect, but some will be true and the only way we can tell which these are is to interact with and discuss them without immediately jumping on one side or the other.
@MontyCantsin5 Жыл бұрын
*hypotheses*
@howardmann868911 ай бұрын
Iraqi dinar
@rogerphelps993910 ай бұрын
You tell which ones are true by looking at the evidence. That has been done.
@charlesmanning345410 ай бұрын
Yes, we should react to them with skepticism and an open mind. Before you we accept radical ideas that align with our politics we should try as hard as we can to prove them wrong. David Graeber posited a lot of unconventional ideas about human history. I am not convinced because he didn't give much evidence or discussion his methodology so I can judge how rigorous it was.
@wilfred565610 ай бұрын
The conventional wisdom is oftentimes wrong. You still believe a certain God passed down the words in the Bible through inspirations?
@helenamcginty492010 ай бұрын
From what I read and hear archaeologists are finding new information, often using modern tech, and moderating what they think. Its what makes science such fun.
@SuperMarksman33Ай бұрын
Moderating is the problem.
@blackspade1 Жыл бұрын
As a fellow archaeologist, the book is incredible. Highly recommended.
@artcenterjo Жыл бұрын
Thank you Mr Bastani and Novara Media for this excellent interview. Great work Mr Wengrow, and heartened to hear you speak of David Graeber. Many of us miss his presence and intellect and are glad his remembrance lives on.
@CecilBothwell10 ай бұрын
This discussion reminds me of a story Buckminster Fuller related. Per Fuller, when Europeans first encountered Polynesians the islanders were mocked because their number system only contained two numbers (yet they navigated great distances between islands). Of course the laptop I'm typing on works on two numbers as well.
@vincentchauvet66548 ай бұрын
On this topic but implicating indigenous australians, 'Australian Aboriginal and Islander mathematics' (John Harris, 1987) is a great read and is interesting both from a linguistic and anthropological perspective !! should be freely available
@AintImRite6 ай бұрын
Richard Buckminster Fuller, 7/12/1895 - 7/1/1983, an American architect, systems theorist, writer, designer, inventor, philosopher and futurist, developed numerous inventions, mainly architectural designs, and popularized the widely known geodesic dome.
@senben97376 ай бұрын
The eljebra works with zero and one think to an arab mathematician called elkhawarzmi
@jackcassedy99616 ай бұрын
@@AintImRitegood….good bot?
@AintImRite6 ай бұрын
Beep bop bee boo bop. 🤣
@cpstr828 Жыл бұрын
We might also have a wrong idea of hunter gatherer societies because most of the ones around today (or in recent times) were pushed to less productive ecosystems (at least for humans). In fact, even in historical times there were some hunter-gatherer (or fisher-gatherer) societies which lived a semi-sedentary life. For example in the Pacific-Northwest.. they had villages in which they lived a good part of the year, going to other sites on a seasonal basis to exploit certain maritime resources. They had hereditary chiefs, slaves, etc.
@ツルのために Жыл бұрын
Not sure if you're referencing the book, but this is discussed in the early chapters of the book. That we assume hunter gatherers in history lived in rubbish places, because thats where they live now.
@cathjj840 Жыл бұрын
Another example could be Papua New Guinea where a plane flying over the island's highlands in the 1930's discovered the existence of stone age people no one had any idea were there. And not just a couple of sparse bands, but the population was estimated to be as high as a million! With those numbers, impossible everyone was purely nomadic, and indeed there was some agriculture and interaction among groups.
@eh1702 Жыл бұрын
Yes. The “set” of cave symbols that are more numerous in caves than animal images - only a couple of dozen symbols but spread over at least two or three continents - definitely shows a shared stream of culture. There are other places where a fairly sedentary hunter-gatherer life was possible. More recently the people living on the banks of the Danube, catching enormous sturgeon at certain times of year, weaning their children in fish roe, and hunting in forested hinterland.
@bearthalamas9241 Жыл бұрын
You can only poop in one place for so long without sewer systems before you have to move somewhere else.
@kellynestegard5208 Жыл бұрын
@@bearthalamas9241 Wrong.
@stillwaitingforblackmetalr2503 Жыл бұрын
I feel something missing here is that farming does indeed seem to appear around 12 kya. But we have a lot of evidence for horticulture, and "garden farming", subsistence, small scale styles of food cultivation etc. happening for thousands and thousands of years before that.
@jeffmacdonald9863 Жыл бұрын
Not that I'm aware of. What crops were these "garden farmers" growing? We've got evidence of the transition and the beginnings of domestication and selection of crops in the thousands of years before farming really gets started, which might be what you're thinking of. Basically still gathering, but starting to change the crops with some tending or incidental selective dispersal of preferred seeds.
@spencerharmon4669 Жыл бұрын
I think the point is that "plow agriculture" isn't somehow the pinnacle of food cultivation. (Actually it depletes the soil.) People experimented with cultivating crops in many places and using many methods that don't fit the kind of agriculture, often considered a more advanced "stage" of civilization, seen in Europe ~12000 BCY. The stageist view is: first agriculture, then cities. The archaeological record shows a far more complex picture, with many sites that have very large populations before the so-called agricultural revolution.
@jeffmacdonald9863 Жыл бұрын
@@spencerharmon4669 I'm still curious what agricultural crops are being talked about pre-12,000 BCY.
@paintsilj Жыл бұрын
@Spencer Harmon what archaeological sites are you referring to and what sizes were they in terms of populations?
@stillwaitingforblackmetalr2503 Жыл бұрын
@@paintsilj for example the sites of the Cucuteni-Trypillia. An old-european (pre-PIE) culture that had no signs of organised farming. in fact they had no signs of social stratification at all. and they had communities the size of the Mesopotamian city-states, thousands of years before.
@VisibleMantra-c1x10 ай бұрын
The most important nonfiction book in my lifetime (58 years). All credit to Wengrow, but Graeber changed my life. That he died so young is unutterably tragic. Graeber's book on this history of debt is equally awesome.
@juliettebouchery3550 Жыл бұрын
I loved the book. These issues are crucial and absolutely need to be included in our current discussion about how we want to live as a society. The simple idea that there are choices...
@loschwahn72311 ай бұрын
_" how we want to live as a society "_ how to be that: *...and those vadals killed the economy and every human only for warfare money...*
@PazLeBon11 ай бұрын
religious differences, class differences, financial differences. No way thngs will ever change for the better
@ericbutler73910 ай бұрын
@@PazLeBon Yes. All that is pushed top down. We have no clue or way to roll out a better way. But we do know a lot of the individuals pushing it down and do nothing to eliminate them.
@rudolfboukal1538 Жыл бұрын
I've been reading Graeber's writings, and have already gotten my copy of His work with Wengrow. I found this interview stimulating, and thought that the host was exceptionally good - he offered great questions and kept an interesting conversation all the more so. Moreover, I found that not only does David Wengrow present himself as an excellent scientist, and teacher - but he is also a humble and wise soul as well. Such a well spent evening listening to this. Thank you for sharing - liked and subscribed!!
@timhallas4275 Жыл бұрын
You praise the man, but say nothing about the subject. Do you accept this as true?
@tamo3041 Жыл бұрын
If you want to go further you are humble.
@tamo3041 Жыл бұрын
@@timhallas4275 there is also much more about this. It is very deep, I was decept about the questions.
@izmirtolga2625 Жыл бұрын
@@tamo3041 "decept" ? what do you mean sir?
@tamo3041 Жыл бұрын
@@izmirtolga2625 rispondo in italiano: sono rimasta delusa dalle domande molto superficiali, ma credo debba essere così. Questo tizio? Si avrei gran piacere a parlarci e condividere pensieri.
@lubumbashi666611 ай бұрын
Fascinating interview, I am going to order that book right now. It reminds me of debates I have had about Aboriginal Australia. There is a continuity of art and culture lasting 60,000 years. I have found many people are irritated when I call this a "civilization" but what we call "civilization" in Australia is less than 300 years old, 0.1% as old as Aboriginal civilization. Manifestly, our "civilization" is rapidly destroying the planet and will not last for another 100 years, perhaps not even 50, or at least not without complete transformation. We are unable to think about deep time. Our modern obsession with novelty and a dogma of constant progress and economic growth has blinded us.
@shauntempley975711 ай бұрын
Yes. It goes back to how the West was developed. It unanimously abandoned the cultures and traditions of ancestors for religious ones, then it abandoned those for material ones, and it is destroying them as the world begins to change against the circumstances that allowed that development. You can see it every time they encounter a people that has those cultures and traditions, because they know those peoples, and they are all over the world, will survive this change, and they will never be in this dominating position again once the collapse is completed.
@joecasual295210 ай бұрын
"Obsession with novelty and a dogma of constant progress and economic growth has blinded us". Don't you see the eloquence of Bush Economic Plan of post 9/11; Shop til one drops! Don't you shop?
@jasondashney10 ай бұрын
The world is empirically better in almost every way than it was 50 years ago. Habitat destruction is about the only thing that’s gotten considerably worse.
@msmeyersmd810 ай бұрын
Exponential growth cannot be sustained on a finite planet with a declining population. The "appearance of exponential growth" can be extended by using propaganda and disinformation to fool an ignorant, uninterested and "asleep" population. Allowing the Top 1% to extract more of the valuable resources and capital until the whole civilization collapses. Probably very rapidly accompanied by the collapse of the rule of law. And a revolution and bloody fighting until new governments are formed.
@AgentSmithers10 ай бұрын
But he's having people think Aborigines had knowledge of the rest of the world. They really don't.
@kimberlygreenland3785 Жыл бұрын
This talk made me think deeper than I have in awhile. Thank you for your work. RIP David Graeber
@DrewBods Жыл бұрын
If two scientists disagree on dark matter , does it make one of them a conspiracy theorist?
@i_like_the_7 Жыл бұрын
@@DrewBodsq
@kimberlygreenland3785 Жыл бұрын
@@MartinMcAvoy my first thought...
@shandytorok259 Жыл бұрын
Don't go too deep though, there is no way back when you go too deep............
@Tupelo927 Жыл бұрын
@@MartinMcAvoy What is a jibbyjabby? Is that cockney slang?
@alexwolfe9895 Жыл бұрын
why are we still stuck. intellectually in the 1700's? A: our history is written as a means of control, not an actual accounting, universities are where knowledge goes to die and become embalmed, when they say; " the birth of agriculture" it means the start of commercial, large scale, artificial agriculture. indigenous peoples were always planting, tending and harvesting, just not in a monoculture grid.
@PazLeBon11 ай бұрын
for real
@paulmurphy85494 ай бұрын
The amazon diversity is the result of that
@Nicholas_Frizzell4 ай бұрын
Look into how big oil conquered the world by Corbett report
@Arnsteel6344 ай бұрын
@@alexwolfe9895 I would love to go back to the 1700s. The Age of Enlightenment. Yes there were universities back then, but they accepted intellectual debate, innovations, insight, and writings from those that did not go to universities. The close mindedness that experts come from universities is a post ww2 phenomenon in general.
@idbyvbrandidentitystrategy66554 ай бұрын
Very true. Opposing views are often seen as stupid and discarded if they have not gone through university research and question.
@davidbofinger11 ай бұрын
Giving up agriculture isn't as surprising as it sounds. Compared with hunting and gathering, agriculture allows a lot higher densities of population at the cost of much more labour. It's not something people adopt because it makes them happy, but something they adopt to stave off mass starvation for a while. If population levels got greatly reduced by some kind of disaster, or if climate change made it easier to live by hunting and gathering, then you can imagine agriculture becoming temporarily unattractive.
@PazLeBon11 ай бұрын
most of us wont personally kill an animal and a growing number wont allow others to kill for them
@PazLeBon10 ай бұрын
@@IntergalacticDustBunny Well our intelligence and knowledge has continued to develop so it makes sense that eventually we will value all life as equally precious
@hankworden38507 ай бұрын
@@PazLeBonBETA!
@rge244914 ай бұрын
@@PazLeBon Most of us dont know how to grow food
@maidende82804 ай бұрын
Plus a grain based diet is unhealthy.
@ko6el2 жыл бұрын
Downstream is Aarons schtick, long form one on one interviews addressing historical perspectives and putting them straight. ✨
@Pid75 Жыл бұрын
We have come a long way in a couple thousand years. It’s not unreasonable to think there were other civilisations that came and went in the previous 100K years.
@jasfan8247 Жыл бұрын
Come a long way?! The civilisation of Simone de Boulevard......😵
@simonruszczak5563 Жыл бұрын
Previous 100M years.
@petegoestubular Жыл бұрын
Made me wonder why he seemed to disparage pseudo archeology. After all, the evidence comes via photographs from space rather than a dig, or from stone experts who say archaeologists explanations for how someone made of fine vase out of granite don't stack up...
@jamesragsdale8202 Жыл бұрын
@@simonruszczak5563 Homo homo sapiens are 200,000 years old.
@simonruszczak5563 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesragsdale8202 Humans have evolved and gone extinct many times over tens of millions of years, our civilisation and species is not special.
@71960311 ай бұрын
Great video and I personally feel it’s insulting to our forefather's to think they just sat on the ass and picked berries for 200,000 years. I wonder how many advanced civilizations have come and gone over that timeframe.
@ChildrensRightsFirst94711 ай бұрын
Lol...I never thought of it as insulting, just felt some envy.
@gppizza897911 ай бұрын
let's say that there were several iterations of technological human waves throughout history. and let's say that there are plausible reasons why there isn't compelling evidence of these waves. why are we the first wave to exploit crude oil, not to mention electricity exploitation. like we have presently?
@eztvlight120211 ай бұрын
Open your mind .
@Uncanny_Mountain11 ай бұрын
@@gppizza8979necessity. In pre anthropocene eras there was more than enough game and resources to not need agriculture or a combustion engine
@PazLeBon11 ай бұрын
if they had any foresight they would have
@pedrolopes4778 Жыл бұрын
People like this raise my hopes on Humanity. Thank you both for this interview!
@michaelb.9231 Жыл бұрын
really? they keep you colonized...
@donHooligan10 ай бұрын
money addicts are *NOT* "humanity" ...quite the opposite, actually.
@felicitymc8200 Жыл бұрын
I left uni despite getting firsts in political philosophy because it drove me crazy that no one would acknowledge that it was built on nonsense. I even got called ‘disruptive’ for constantly questioning! How can you be a disruptive thinker in a university?
@betweentheripples8847 Жыл бұрын
Critical thinking and universities have been mutually exclusive for almost a decade.
@Whoishere233311 ай бұрын
Because the professor can’t give you answers unless they’re written down in a book written by someone else. Most just want you to follow the same thought processes they did.
@NOT_SURE..11 ай бұрын
have you heard of the 5 monkys experiment ? @@Whoishere2333
@RobespierreThePoof10 ай бұрын
Scholarship is built on "disrupting" established thinking. But you do need to convince others of the strength of your ideas through meticulous published research. Sorry you didn't stay long enough to learn that. But it's okay. Academia is insanely competitive and underpaid. You would never make it by simply being disagreeable. That's not enough. You can get away with being disagreeable after you've persuaded some of your opponents through the strength of your research. But most scholars prefer the easier route: be agreeable while quietly working at alternate theories until you get there.
@MaxSafeheaD10 ай бұрын
There's ways of going about things. Don't forget the Kruger-Dunning effect.
@psychoprosthetic11 ай бұрын
I stumbled on this and was half expecting a Gonzo Hancock rant of thoroughly dubious veracity. What a delight to hear such a switched on, thoughtful, modest yet deeply informed discussion throwing a genuinely refreshing light on archaeology proper.
@psychoprosthetic11 ай бұрын
@cl1ntonbodycount652 Hancock is either paranoid or dishonest. I guess he's a good self publisher and tells good fantasy stories and tells them interestingly. His belief in beyond the fringe long discredited ideas like Atlantis is amusing enough and one could argue that while there is no reasonable argument to support the idea of of an Atlantis that ever existed - even the original source, Plato, is self contradictory and may not have believed himself what he wrote - and everything about the accounts are anachronistic and geographically inaccurate one might argue Atlantis represents some vague idea of something we haven't found yet, and fair enough, neither is there any decent evidence to support the fancy. His dishonesty, though, is in representing archaeology as some edifice invested in discrediting true inquiry and closing ranks to shut him up. This is complete rubbish. One might think such things of the multibillion dollar oil or pharmaceutical industries, but most archaeology is done by passionate people on a shoestring budget and, like David Wengrow here, are mostly careful methodical thinkers genuinely interested in what we can learn about the past, At best, Hancock is a ringleader in his own private circus.
@calumroche28512 жыл бұрын
I'm looking forward to this. I'm reading 'The dawn of everything' at the moment. A Wengrow fan via David Graeber.
@ellengran6814 Жыл бұрын
For hundered of years we in the West have killed, tortured and enslaved other humans. We have totally destroyed other human cultures, their language, their Gods and even their food and clothes. The Bible, McDonalds and jeans was told to be the superior. We were told we constantly mooved forward to something better. Meanwhile aboriginal australiens say they were healthy, satisfied and lived good lives before their continent was invaded by "the superior" culture. How many people in the West are satisfied (=dont want more, more more goods/money/sex etc)
@nmart1n Жыл бұрын
Just ordered the book. Fascinating conversation. More of this please, Novara.
@clivehendricks2379 Жыл бұрын
I am reading it right now, and I am not impressed. The whole narrative comes off as very arrogant, i.e. 'Everything We Think We Know About Early Human History is Wrong'. The first few chapters are devoted to attacking anyone who has written on this topic in the last 400 years. There are definitely interesting tidbits here and there, but they often contradict themselves, and make conclusions based on shacky assumptions and anecdotal evidence. They admonish others for making assumptions about ancient hunter gathers based on modern hunter gatherers, then they do the same thing. They assume Life among the Amazon Tribes must be better than modern society based on a sample size of one girl who was kidnapped by the Yanomami, then escaped 20 years later, could not adapt to modern life, so went back to the Yanomami. They then back this up with more anecdotal evidence from Benjamin Franklin. They do have good points to make, but their approach has been a turn off for me.
@thoughfullylost6241 Жыл бұрын
Aboriginal oral histories from all over the world have been saying this for hundreds of years. It's nice that open-minded people are finally understanding it to some degree and doing further research. Anyone interested in this should look into the writing of John Mohawk.
@VicenteMReyes-vs9nh Жыл бұрын
I don't trust oral history. No one should trust oral history. Not for scientific purposes at least.
@thoughfullylost6241 Жыл бұрын
@@VicenteMReyes-vs9nh that's more than a bit short-sighted in my opinion
@TheKraken53603 ай бұрын
One theory is that because of previous eras of more intensive farming, there was soil depletion by the time of the construction of Stonehenge. So, people may have been forced to partially abandon farming practices, as opposed to voluntarily giving them up.
@krazykkarl3 ай бұрын
The soil was held together by tree roots but all the trees were cut down for smelting during the copper, bronze and iron age.
@nvsv_wintersport Жыл бұрын
Main lesson for me: question everything! And look for new information.
@Paulcolt13 Жыл бұрын
Cereal growing in a fairly damp environment in the UK would most likely have led to a lot of failed harvest and famine, heavy rainfall destroys cereal crops, damp causes toxic moulds etc, I think it was dropped because it didn't work, saying that I think the book is extremely interesting and enjoyed this interview immensely
@hughdennison3013 Жыл бұрын
I reckon They ate loads of hazelnuts meat , fish and mushrooms over winter.... the cereals came later for bread and beer and forage and bedding for the animals geese etc... if it was a good year for cereals it was a bonus. Storing grain would have been a lot more difficult so came a lot later, initially cereals must have been a bonus nothing more, unless you lived in more predictable weather. Rust on cereals can be controlled with milk products though
@jeffmacdonald9863 Жыл бұрын
I can't quite tell when this is supposed to have happened either. There was a migration of Indo-Europeans into Britain somewhere in that period that may have affected the shift as well. And evidence of a shift more to pastoralism than back to hunting and gathering. Which might fit with descendants of steppe nomads moving in.
@pavelandel1538 Жыл бұрын
it could have been a result of climate cooling after the Holocene climate optimum peak (the warmest period during the current interglacial, warmer then today) which forced the inhabitants to switch to pastoralism, coupled with the yamnaya-derived invasion of the first (pre-Celtic) Indo-Europeans, who appear to have largely replaced the previous population (of mostly Neolitic farmers with some WE hunter-gatherers) based on genetic evidence
@jeffmacdonald9863 Жыл бұрын
@@pavelandel1538 That's why a time would be useful. That climate optimum seems to have been ending about the right time. There was also a big population decline across Europe, generally attributed to plagues, over roughly the same timespan. And then migrations off the steppes. Somewhere in there, this supposed switch away from cereal agriculture. Without knowing which bits came first, it's really hard to talk about why. If agriculture continued right up until the pastoralists arrived, that's one answer. If it's associated with a big climate change or with population drops due to disease, those are others. But if you ignore all the other things going on, it's easy to reinforce the idea that "sometimes they just decide to stop doing agriculture". (And even then to imply it was back to HG, rather than to herding.)
@AM-fs1je Жыл бұрын
Grain suffered the same in medieval Europe which had periods of colder, wetter weather followed by outbreaks of ergot poisoning with horrific consequences.
@christopherstewart98746 ай бұрын
It is ironic that a video entitled "Everything We Think We Know About Early Human History is Wrong" wonders why KZbin viewers are attracted to "pseudoarcheology" videos whose premise is that everything we know about early human history is wrong.
@awoodmann17462 ай бұрын
Why are you offended?
@christopherstewart98742 ай бұрын
@@awoodmann1746 I am not offended in the least. I just think his choice of title is ironic.
@spiritualanarchist81622 ай бұрын
Yes, the thumbnail is somewhat ironic. Maybe the difference is more subtle ? 'What we think .....' meaning : How academia in general have been changing it's perspective on hunter gatherer society over the last decades , while the general public hasn't caught up yet. Pseudo archaeology are more about ' 'THEY won't tell you the truth about early history '
@eh1702 Жыл бұрын
If you think about the British Isles, the reason they would “turn their back” on agrarian farming is pretty obvious: where wheat was bred, there’s ten times less rainfall. Even in the south of France, you don’t need too much adaptation. But by the time you get to the Atlantic coast, you’re getting significantly different rainfall and light/dark conditions and much less predictable weather. A single weather event like three days of gusty, heavy rain would wipe out the whole crop of “naked” wheat & barley they had then. (They eventually bred much more sturdy type that need to be forcibly separated from the stalk when ripe.). The farmers who spread from Anatolia or the fertile crescent were growing things like lentils and dates which even now aren’t feasible for much of northern and western Europe.
@johnwoods7650 Жыл бұрын
I agree. Western Britain has a lot of rain and dark, and as we all know, much of Scotland can get very cold and snow covered. However, oats can be grown more successfully than wheat, and root vegetables can be grown even in Sweden.
@jim-stacy Жыл бұрын
For that reason do you suppose if there was agrarian farming with organic tools pre younger dryas in the warm latitudes where they were effectively farming sea bed, would there be any evidence left at all?
@brucetucker484711 ай бұрын
The problem is, how do you support the new, larger population if you revert to hunting and gathering? Cereal agriculture supports a lot more people on a given amount of land, and by the time Neolithic farmers showed up Britain had been inhabited for several thousand years and had probably reached somewhere near its carrying capacity for hunter-gatherers - not to mention that rather than the farmers assimilating the hunter-gatherers, which is what all the evidence indicates, if the farmers had fairly quickly given up farming the assimilation would be the other way around since the earlier inhabitants would have much better knowledge of how best to live off that land.
@andylyon3867 Жыл бұрын
Having done farming, hunting, and wild crafting I am convinced that success at farming requires more knowledge and skill than any other livelihood but hunting gathering.
@PazLeBon11 ай бұрын
boooooo
@nickmiller76Күн бұрын
You should have tried aerospace engineering, or brain surgery perhaps. Pretty sure they need a fair bit of "knowledge and skill".
@TNMJAD11 ай бұрын
On the pseudo archeology topic. I think that part of it is a difference in interest. In this interview the interest is sociological, what were the habits behaviors and social structures of prehistory and how can we learn from them. If your interest is technology you may focus on buildings structure monuments and speculate specifically about them and how they were done. The difference in interests leads to the difference in focus and a desire towards alternative interpretations of history.
@limeyank279510 ай бұрын
Seemed like a basic conversation for the time we live in
@limeyank279510 ай бұрын
Wasn't impressed
@limeyank279510 ай бұрын
Was saying the video was basic! Your comment was more interesting 😊
@bikerpaul682 жыл бұрын
That was a fascinating and thought-provoking discussion. Many thanks to you both.
@shandytorok259 Жыл бұрын
Just another con....nothing fascinating about it.....
@perjanuschas8050 Жыл бұрын
What was thoughtprovoking in this discussion? There was nothing new at all? No new ideas, not even a hint to the controversy in Egyptology going on these days.
@bikerpaul68 Жыл бұрын
@@perjanuschas8050 Well, it provoked my thoughts. And perhaps Wengrow finds that he doesn't need to refer to Egyptology to make his arguments. Have you actually read his book?
@bell191991 Жыл бұрын
I took a module in my history degree about pre-Columbian and Spanish America. We learned about how Tlaxcala had only recently been subjugated by the Aztecs, so was very happy to use the Spanish conquistadors to attack their hated enemy. But I don't remember it being mentioned that they were a republic, had a parliament, or were a democracy. Would love to read more on the subject.
@TeaParty1776 Жыл бұрын
Tell us about their individual rights.
@cannaroe1213 Жыл бұрын
You have the right to sacrifice a child, if you cannot afford a child one will be provided for you.
@cristianpopescu78 Жыл бұрын
@@cannaroe1213Nailed!
@austyn500411 ай бұрын
@@cannaroe1213😂 that sounds like the Phoenicians too
@noegojimmy11 ай бұрын
@@cristianpopescu78Nailed what?
@darrengagliardi154010 ай бұрын
With what we’re learning of global cataclysms, it is hard to rule out the possibility that there have been periods of advanced human development, perhaps multiple times, over the past several hundred thousand years.
@PATRICKJLM10 ай бұрын
Yet, we have never found anything "advanced" hundred of thousand years old.
@BadOompaloompa7910 ай бұрын
Nothing like our current civilization. You will be able to see our mark on the planet forever. A billion years from now some future evolved species will dig down through the geological reccord and find the compressed boundry layer of our civilization marking the start of the 6th mass extinction.
@keastymatthew240710 ай бұрын
YOU havent found anything. Grow up@@PATRICKJLM
@Padraigp10 ай бұрын
Not really that hard to exclude that possibility when we have no evidence for it ...be very hard to have such Ana danced civilization that you disassembled your entire city and any evidence of it or of the systems nessisary to support it during a cataclysm!
@salvalooez224910 ай бұрын
I concur
@baz5973 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this fascinating interview with David Wengrow. A wise and humble man who has decided to impart his wisdom upon others. Students are fortunate to have a dedicated and knowledgeable teacher. The homage to David Graeber at the end of the interview was truly sad. RIP.
@duncanmelville2137 Жыл бұрын
I was watching this while ironing, had to stop the ironing and watch this fascinating discussion. Congratulations on this, out to get the book later today. Wonderful stuff!
@iammichaeldavis4 ай бұрын
Man, when a fantastic interviewer has a brilliant and erudite subject, you never want it to end. What a great conversation
@Osammar1002 жыл бұрын
Wait, did I just find out that, around the time stone henge was built, the UK rejected farming practices from Europe and went back to foraging? Like a Neolithic proto-brexit?
@PazLeBon11 ай бұрын
lmao, then half the population died of mushroom fever having only ever tried the magic ones previously
@MaxSafeheaD10 ай бұрын
With the exception being that they where probably well informed about what they where doing, rather than led by a bunch of anarcho-capitalist billionaires to cut their own noses off!
@AintImRite6 ай бұрын
In the Paleolithic Levant, 23,000 years ago, cereals cultivation of emmer, barley and oats has been researched near the sea of Galilee by the Ohalu II.
@maidende82804 ай бұрын
They realised carnivore was superior!
@heraklit8.1703 ай бұрын
They brexited bevore it was cool
@SkywalkerFTP2 жыл бұрын
Ah man! you done and did it, reading "The dawn of everything' at the mo and it's game changing. Great shout with getting David on!
@jinoh741811 ай бұрын
I had a professor in college say similar things. That our history was manufactured.
@rainblaze.10 ай бұрын
It is a product of deduction based on evidence. Nothing is written in stone .. either metaphorically or literally. As long as you realise that there is a certain amount of political bias in the interpretation. The facts remain material. But it is at best, "disingenuous" to imply it is merely "manufactured" and risks wild and far fetched flights of fancy the like of which we see in those uncertain and darkest flung corners of the Internet today. And only goes to fuel the ever increasing propagation of the post truth society.
@Padraigp10 ай бұрын
I mean it can't not be manufactured. People can only see so far as their axioms allow them. If your axiom of truth starts eith the idea that you are gods chosen people or some such funky idea its going to be very hard to see beyond that. If you grow up believing money has inherent value its going to be difficult to see somone not asking for money for their work to be mad ..and everyone is always coming from some perspective nobody is robotically aware of all the facts even in one small domain to logically appriase those facts without a perspective being overlaid.
@stpancraschapel21369 ай бұрын
Well yes, it’s difficult to see how it could be done any other way. (Journalism too, in the best of faith.) One can assemble a priori evidence but as soon as you then use that to produce an interpretation, you are inventing a narrative. It might even be “true” in the traditional sense of the word but it’s still a manufacturing process.
@Padraigp9 ай бұрын
@stpancraschapel2136 literally everything is manufactured. Mathematics english literature history our vision when we look out of our eyeballs ...everything in your head is manufactured from a limited apprehension of reality into a story of what it is you're looking at.
@AintImRite6 ай бұрын
Ikr, for everything we experience, we manufacture personal beliefs based on our limited knowledge, which we then often forget to review and test for accuracy.
@rayb2542 Жыл бұрын
This was a very fascinating and thought-provoking interview. I will read his book. Though not entirely convincing, it certainly made some very valid points to be debated - and challenged - further. One of the recurring themes observed over my lifetime is that the study of history (in its widest sense) moves towards conclusions that chime with the cultural and political themes of a given time. Hypotheses emerge that reflect contemporary debate and this discussion was, at least to an extent, an example of this. Thank you Novara for this excellent content.
@nickstone311311 ай бұрын
Yes facinating and some truth but what u say about historical analysis gelling with current ideology ,so true. I am very interested in end of Roman Britain and advent of the Saxon's etc. Yes the Victorian invasion and slaughter no longer seen as valid but now it's the other extreme where there was no violence at all ,being pushed. And clearly improbable.
@haraldthi11 ай бұрын
To me it's a natural development, as we take hold of those pieces of information that seems interesting to us in the problem solving that we are currently at. The rest of the available information is too much to have a grasp on, so we let it be.
@1237barca10 ай бұрын
Great comment. Most facts of history are totally accurate but the overall narrative is largely false. We live in a short term medium age, not as dark as some times, but we are not the most advanced human civilization to have walked the earth
@lolocemoipopo75378 ай бұрын
You can read Billy Meier's writings for free.
@sharpfocus5 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely brilliant guest. David Wengrow is a joy to listen to.
@dumbvedeoz9 ай бұрын
he didn't say anything this was BS!!!
@sharpfocus59 ай бұрын
@@dumbvedeoz David Wengrow is a professor at one of the world's top universities and you are ....? If you want to disect his arguments then articulate your views and formulate a compelling argument. A one line "BS" dismissal is not enough.
@LegendaMK11 ай бұрын
I liked the chat, but at the end is where I dissagree with David. For me the Sphinx and it`s construction is much more interesting than why lions and people were sacrifaced.
@nyalmmm Жыл бұрын
David Wengrow is an amazing scholar, studied his work at univeristy and it is some of the most detailed and careful research i read. His book The Archaeology of Early Egypt: Social Transformations in North-East Africa, c.10,000 to 2,650 BC is incredibly beautifully illustrated and suprisingly readable for an academic work. It will totally change the way you think about Ancient Egypt.
@professorrhyyt3689 Жыл бұрын
I believe him studying theater has helped him tremendously with communication.
@MarmaladeINFP Жыл бұрын
@@professorrhyyt3689 - Another favorite scholar of mine is the psychologist Julian Jaynes. He left academia for a while to work as a playwright. It was maybe his non-academic experience that led him to a larger perspective. He quickly lost interest in behaviorism research and ended up writing a book that looked far beyond conventional psychology, including studying the evidence about the early humanity.
@professorrhyyt3689 Жыл бұрын
@@ario4795 What do you mean "ambiguos"? Egypt is located in Africa.
@NoLefTurnUnStoned. Жыл бұрын
@@ario4795 But ironically you use the term European. Were the Greeks “European” or Middle Eastern? Asian isn’t a race either. I imagine you don’t consider Nubia, Kush or modern Sudan, Eritrea/Ethiopia to be “African” either. Strange aroma coming from your comment.
@ayahaqeel1782 Жыл бұрын
@@NoLefTurnUnStoned. , they not Africa is continent not gene. Cushitic people and native middle eastern share dna and linguistic.
@janearmstrong79452 жыл бұрын
The Dawn of Everything is amazing, it touches on so many other subjects.
@MaxSafeheaD10 ай бұрын
As a forager, bushcrafter with a huge facination in deep time and the intelligence and ingenuity of "hunter-gatherer" peoples ... this was hugely self-indulgent of me! Lots and lots confirming my intuition but very happy to hear the details and confirmations. I'm enjoying the book very much already too =) Lots to talk about tracking, memory, etc ... I'm only halfway through the interview too thought so I'll not pre-empt too much ;) I do hope Wengrow is on Bluesky.
@nvrmndynwa86542 жыл бұрын
This is quality content. Thank you Novara for opening up this vein in my brain.
@stvbrsn Жыл бұрын
Oh no! Listening to this podcast gave you a stroke? Heal up quick!
@timhallas4275 Жыл бұрын
Quality content? So you think this guy is right?
@stvbrsn Жыл бұрын
@@timhallas4275 I’m curious, what’s the purpose of a comment like this? Attempting to open an honest dialog? Defending an orthodoxy? Troll? Who benefits from presenting false choices?
@pwcrabb5766 Жыл бұрын
Ponderously slow
@timhallas4275 Жыл бұрын
@@stvbrsn My comment was directed to the op... troll.
@idaloup6721 Жыл бұрын
Aaron is one of the best journalists ever. It's always a pleasure to watch an ITW led by him.
@raphodonbiampa575610 ай бұрын
Especially that “civilization started in the Fertile Crescent” nonsense. As if it was smooth sailing and not a product of years of trials, errors, and failures
@scipioafricanus587119 күн бұрын
The sentence that you call nonsense doesn't exclude that it wasn't all smooth sailing. Stop your nonsense.
@alexwolfe9895 Жыл бұрын
55:00 question; could urban humans have lived alongside primitive humans? answer; they still do today.
@CoffeeFiend12 ай бұрын
I was very shocked when he admitted this. Not because it's some great revelation. It's fucking obvious. But the mainstream seems to avoid it with a barge pole. If the two co-exist today, then of course they could easily have co-existed in the past. That scares the fuck out of them as it reveals their models to be very shaky when any kind of self-evident nuance is introduced.
@andrew3203 Жыл бұрын
Historians are rarely geographers too. Which makes many of them miss obvious things like Europe being covered with forests (and marshes) near completely until 2000 years ago or so. What old poems remain from ancient times they all mention shepherds or hunters, who needed to travel to new areas due to grass depletion or lack of targets for hunts. Hard to imagine in these days, when borders are being barb-wired or even lined with land-mines. It was just as hard to imagine for later times, when migrations destroyed the Roman Empire or the Mongols ran over East Europe.
@RobespierreThePoof10 ай бұрын
Ehhhh. I suppose that's happened but every historian I know is attentive to these things. But historians don't generally research the paleolithic and neolithic periods. Other academic disciplines do that. By the way the ancient period comes AFTER the time period you seem to be talking about. They aren't one and the same.
@arsartium1089 ай бұрын
What we "know" in the West isn't "received wisdom," but rather received speculation based on specious assumptions, most notably that of materialistic monism.
@Galdring15 күн бұрын
I suggest you move out of the west, let go of western innovations, and live as people did five hundred years ago. No one is stopping you.
@arsartium10815 күн бұрын
@@Galdring Why should I move? Do ideas incongruous with your own threaten you? Are you really that small-minded?
@DMC198213 күн бұрын
@@GaldringYou just proved your ignorance .
@FSboy7010 күн бұрын
LOL, how "clever" of you. Just goes to show you know nothing about western culture, history or civilization.
@FSboy7010 күн бұрын
@@arsartium108 Nonsensical posturing.
@madeleineswords7042 жыл бұрын
So sad and very very strange, David Graeber in his prime, only 40 or 50, so insightful, deeply humble genuinely really nice guy.super intelligent. A sudden shocking loss, the two Davids were just great together in interview
@IshtarNike2 жыл бұрын
Always the best are taken early while the gouls linger on to torment us. Trump and Kissinger still going strong. There is no God.
@tofty21 Жыл бұрын
@@NocturnalDoom exactly. We all need to be skiing that question!
@cathjj840 Жыл бұрын
@@tofty21 Oh dear - skiing questions? Never got the hang of how to slalom one of those about archeology!
@goodluck5642 Жыл бұрын
@@MartinMcAvoy lol
@spencerharmon4669 Жыл бұрын
@@MartinMcAvoy not the time or place for this.
@roarblast7332 Жыл бұрын
This is one of the most fascinating interviews I've ever watched.
@aercegovic10 ай бұрын
His holistic explanation of pseudoarchaeology is excellently thought out. Very interesting interview.
@josejrtuti Жыл бұрын
Maybe the reason why very little happened from the origin of homo sapiens and the begin of agriculture (~12,000 years ago) is because there was a glacial age between them, that lasted more than 100,000 years
@marymagnuson51914 ай бұрын
The Pleistocene lasted about 2 million years - but Ice didn’t cover the entire earth.
@PaulThronson Жыл бұрын
Thank you for shining a light on this book and interviewing David. The moment I was done listening to this book I listened to it again and then again. I'm going for my fourth read because I am going to memorize every wonderful story and point they make. What a time to be a human! Despite the message that we humans don't change up our government like we did in the old days - in fact - it is more flexible than ever, for people who have the means and the knowledge. But that is another story ...
@wwsuwannee79938 ай бұрын
The last glacial period started about 115k years ago. Now, considering modern man has been around for 200k to 300k years, whose to say a stone age civilization didn't exist before this time, and was simply ground into dust by the mile high ice sheets? I find this particularly interesting as you can find precision megalithic stone work in places that the glaciers never touched, such as Peru. If you look at the ancient cities of Uruk and the like in Iraq, there is hardly anything but dust left. These cities are a mere 5-7k years old and were never glaciated. So...what might happen to a city after 100k years and smashed by glaciers?
@CoffeeFiend12 ай бұрын
In general people seem to have a real struggle understanding how people even lived through an ice age to begin with which has always made me scratch my head. We pre-dated the ice age and it wasn't just suddenly no ice age *NOW ICE AGE* pew pew barren frozen wasteland everywhere in an instant. We had tools, systems and infrastructure in place before it, we just adapted to a changing environment. It shouldn't be complicated to think about. And the vast swathes of the Earth that were unaffected... Modern people are so dense.
@Mort7an2 жыл бұрын
What a coincidence. Started his book this week. Incredible stuff! Thanks for this. :)
@jayplay81402 жыл бұрын
This is fantastic, more like this please and thanks
@pabloinla127 күн бұрын
Not exciting to listen to the slow vocals, but indeed blowing in the intellectual study of culture. I could listen for many hours and still become more excited. Thanks to you both.
@wyganter9 күн бұрын
Set the play speed to 1.25x
@colterino Жыл бұрын
David Wengrow. You are doing such excellent work. Graeber he’s looking down from on high, applauding and bowing to you. Your clarity and ability to communicate such beautiful and subtle nuance behind these revolutionary commonsense human theories it’s so important, edifying and calming. Your gentle incredibly well informed ministration of these lofty topics is such a gift to all of us, to all of humanity. Thank you, sincerely. Bravo. Onward. Thankful 👏👏👏😌🙏❤️ Great Job, Aaron !
@cleonawallace3762 жыл бұрын
Wonderful interview! I love these in depth discussions (I loved the Chris Packham and Oliver Bullough ones too), and this one especially, as I read the Davids' book Dawn of Everything this summer past, so it was great to hear a discussion of the book's main topics. I keep recommending the book to people, but am now able to share this, which is a much better recommendation!
@ohnoourtableitsbroken65276 ай бұрын
still can't get over David Graeber's passing, we're missing such a brilliant mind. I cried the day I found out he passed. Good on Dabid Wengrow for bringing their amazing book's idea forward!
@debradelarue9717 Жыл бұрын
Agriculture and " civilized" society has been around for more than a few thousand years. Much much more.
@petrosstefanidis63962 жыл бұрын
It's really fascinating that you're going to work with Forensic Architecture. Really looking forward to see the project you're doing together on Ukraine. I'll definitely go check their conference in Germany that you mentioned. Their work is just fantastic!
@cathjj840 Жыл бұрын
I believe a culture he may have been referring to in that context would be 'Cucuteni', whose geographical footprint went beyond current day Ukraine. If memory serves me, they've never found any weapons, yet material remains are abundant. Stefan Milo did a video on it if you'd like to get some foreknowledge. Stefan's a good vulgarizer, not a pseudo-archeologist and has no pretentions in that sense.
@scifiwriter98 Жыл бұрын
Watch some videos on Jon Levi KZbin channel and it will open your eyes .
@leslielandberg56202 ай бұрын
The guest speaks very slowly. I’m playing back at 1.25 and it feels a lot livelier. He’s making some excellent, much needed observations about the collective intellectual fallacies that have shaped our views about very early human history. I think he’s spot on!
@williamfuentes876 Жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed the interview and look forward to reading the book. But my recent reenergized interest in archeology has been spurned from finding the books of Graham Hancock. His books on the conquest of Mexico is a dramatic novel which provoked thought and interest in me into archeology and prehistory. You may call Mr. Hancock a “pseudo- archeologist”, but I wonder if Mr. Wengrow would have published this work without the challenge of Mr. Hancock. In any event I am thankful to Mr. Hancock and also look forward from learning from Mr. Wengrow.
@alexandermukai7724 Жыл бұрын
Graham Hancock never claimed to be an archaeologist. He’s a journalist with an interest in investigating the past through the eyes of specialists from many different disciplines. It’s unfortunate that some academics feel threatened in the theories in which they are so invested as to throw slurs, such as ‘pseudo-archaeologist” at people who challenge them. Oh, what we might possibly learn if many of these academics chose a more cooperative and collaborative approach, constructive and interdisciplinary, with a willingness to test new theories and examine all the evidence. The gentleman interviewed here seems to be more open and have a somewhat more balanced approach, but still dismisses ‘Atlantis’ as if somehow it was either a decisively proven fiction or a fanciful non-question. Current scientific research into the catastrophic events around the Younger Dryas are throwing doubt on many long-held assumptions about our ancient past. Yes, there are mysteries and they are well worth investigating.
@tamashumi7961 Жыл бұрын
@@alexandermukai7724 they seem to be threatened to the point that they need a bigger gun now. "pseudo-archaeologist" doesn't carry enough of a slurring weight anymore apparently. Now they need to call Graham "racist" (here in the interview only indirectly and in a subtle way but still). Quite disgraceful, to be honest.
@Caldwing11 ай бұрын
Hancock is a ridiculous con-artist. "pseudo-archaeology" is too kind a term for the garbage he creates. He's found a great way to live well on the gullibility of others.
@kellymaguire79122 жыл бұрын
. Really enjoyed this interview. A pleasure to hear such eloquence. It's a sublime book. Mind blowing. The work of two beautiful minds . Two beautiful Davids. Thanks Aaron , great interview (your mind's also equally beautiful, of course)
@mostlyunmentionables11 ай бұрын
spectacular deflection on the age of the sphinx question... TWICE. After all but spelling out Hancock's name... ''some of the things you see on Netflix''. Maybe that ought to be the guy that should publicly debate Hancock on JRE, if he's such a competent representative of the academic consensus.
@waltmisery14772 жыл бұрын
Can you imagine where we the conversation would be if everyone had the opportunities shown here!!
@tonyprost5575 Жыл бұрын
there is a lot of "must have beens" and ""raises the questions" in this presentation. Not a lot of Venus of Willendorfs to grab on to.
@andreasekler53139 ай бұрын
Graeber and Wengrow made an extraordinary contribution to our understanding of human history. As an always interested person in history, archeology and anthropology, these fresh, "out of the box" ideas makes me so happy, since I had always struggled with the mainstream theories. Thank you very much to give us a hope that we may re-write history in a much real way❤
@heddysue0655 Жыл бұрын
Cataclysmic events happened frequently throughout history.. Keeps bringing us back to basics.
@mnomadvfx11 ай бұрын
No. Just the one overarching climate problem that inhbited long term stability and growth. Put down the bible and step slowly away from it. Real life cataclysms don't work that way. Way back before we had large nations bound by an overarching control (monarchy or empire) the largest singular entities were city states like Uruk or Shuruppak. Within that kind of structure a single bad river flood could destroy the whole thing and disperse its population along the river basin - which is almost certainly the origin of the original Mesopotamian flood myth from which the Noah and Gilgamesh flood myths are derived. Less well known is that all of Canaan was in fact a neighbor of Mesopotamia, and further back during the times of the Akkadian empire it was actually part of its territory - so the spread of that ancient river flood myth to Canaan and its associated cultures like Israel and Judea is very likely. Contrary to how the bible/Torah presents it the kingdom of Israel was in fact a Canaanite nation from the outset, just as its language that persists to this day is in fact Canaanite in origin.
@AdventuresofaPirateGirl Жыл бұрын
The Davids book IS intellectually earth shattering. I am reading it again. I appreciate this interview, Mr. Navara, you are a deep thinker and i thoughtful communicator, thank you for your work.
@Grievance87 Жыл бұрын
"intellectually earth shattering" Oh my... are you sure it´s not a synapse meltdown, caused by a meteorite of wisdom? Let´s figure out what´s the best exaggeration :)
@PazLeBon11 ай бұрын
@@Grievance87 lol intelligence is certainly relative anyway, can a 32bit pc be amazed by the 64bit one is a question i ponder
@kirksway17 ай бұрын
his voice is WAY to soft and relaxing.
@JYHRO02 ай бұрын
I wouldn't say relaxing. Rather tiresome. One has to stretch the hear and even guess at the unpronounced phonemes. He really needs to learn the rudiments of the art of speaking.
@branislavtrninic4505 Жыл бұрын
Once in a while I have privilege of witnessing work of great individuals who make me proud to be human. Sorry for your loss and thank you for your work and effort
@PazLeBon11 ай бұрын
lionel messi
@ironmitchtyson Жыл бұрын
Graham Hancock was talking about this in the 90s. I wonder whether this guy will get smeared with slime for 30 years for going against the tide.
@gorillaguerillaDK Жыл бұрын
This guy isn’t saying the same gibberish as Hancock - Hancock ignores evidence, David isn’t making the sort of mind boggling stupid claims as Hancock does!
@PINKFL0YD-s2h Жыл бұрын
@@gorillaguerillaDKRead Llyod Price (rip)
@gorillaguerillaDK Жыл бұрын
@@PINKFL0YD-s2h The Musician/Singer? Why?
@shiva4ever3 ай бұрын
Seems more about Europe, and in that too quite a bit about the British Isles, than about other parts of human civilisation. He says that crop farming was collectively given up in a return to hunting gathering. While this may be so in BI, it was never the case in South Asia onwards where agriculture formed the unbroken, continuous (and continuing) mainstay. Interesting discussion, even if not as categorically universal in its application. 👍
@jillybe1873Ай бұрын
He also talks about North America😂
@GranTurismoRaceReplays Жыл бұрын
This was incredible Aaron and Novara. I could listen to David Wengrow all day. Amazing content guys! Keep up the good work!
@chriswise7978 Жыл бұрын
How old is this video?
@keithmartin5994 Жыл бұрын
Why does this interview look like it's taking place on the USS Enterprise?
@64Sq2 ай бұрын
im on acid too
@Arnsteel6342 ай бұрын
The shirt color. It got me too
@TomBombadil6762 ай бұрын
Britts
@luth3713Ай бұрын
Keith, 2 reasons: artificial lighting in an enclosed space, and shirts with out collars
@999Emergency245 ай бұрын
We were alot smarter in prehistorical times than modern academia would like us to believe. There are too many out of places artifacts, and monliths that can't be duplicated even today.
@tomg2682 жыл бұрын
I never thought of Hobbes and Rousseau as retrying to say something about human history - I always thought as David said that they were thought experiments about whether humans are fundamentally selfish or altruistic - which has huge political implications.
@johnschuh8616 Жыл бұрын
Hobbes in particular was thinking about human nature. He lived through the English Civil war, which was like a return to the bloody days of the Wars of the Roses.
@kamilahmorain4021 Жыл бұрын
You should include a reading list in the description of these dialogues. Very insightful.
@butchshadwell36133 ай бұрын
The rate of technological advancement was not uniform over the period of human existence. Was it a change in our brains, society, or communication, that is primarily responsible for this fact?
@jefftheriault5522 Жыл бұрын
I can see how the father's and mother's, brothers and sisters of the sacrificial victims would have started a trend in walking away from Cahokia. There's a book and a movie in here. The growing fanaticism of the priesthood that leads to the start of the practice, and the point where those carrying the cost reach the breaking point.
@titus7980 Жыл бұрын
Mr. Wengrow said Gobekli tepe was 9000 years old.....Isn't it closer to 12500 years old???
@moontreat416111 ай бұрын
Back in the 1970’s I helped an archeological digs and finds of buildings and settlements that were present before the 1400’s. The Maritimes, Canada. We were laughed at and dismissed. In the past decade, archeologist returned and took X-rays, cameras down into tunnels etc., and there is lots of evidence despite the criticism and now, it’s being accepted…kind of. They do t know what to do which tells me what they do is founded on lies because a PH.D. Says you are trained to greet and process new knowledge. Most can’t.
@dianadurham1017 Жыл бұрын
This argument was interesting to begin with, I wish he'd stayed with the longer timeline and with the areas he studied. When he gets to the Americas he makes huge leaps in the argument, and it just becomes another let's hit out at European culture, which, however you want to frame it, has made global contributions to the well being and emergence of civilisation.
@MaxSafeheaD10 ай бұрын
Clearly you haven't read his book, studied colonial history. You've just perfectly illustrated exactly the problem with a 19-20th century european colonial ideology.
@lafleurproductions Жыл бұрын
While this was very interesting, it is a shame so much time was given over to maligning Graham Hancock's 'Ancient Apocalypse' netflix series (without ever naming it). Given some of the discusssion, I was also surprised not to hear Jane Jacobs' "Cities and the Wealth of Nations: Principles of Economic Life" mentioned in the context of theorising about cities coming before agriculture.
@HandyMan6572 ай бұрын
What fascinates me is the arrogance of man to think we know nearly as much as we do about this amazing planet we live on. Its secrets are its own, she'll let us see what she wants.
@madoldbatwoman2 жыл бұрын
I stopped hanging my washing to go and buy the book while he was talking. Being an ancient history documentary addict, I've been pondering along these lines for the last few years. So many bedrock certainties still being based on the findings of a particular 'English Gentleman' class with all their bias. The young ones went adventuring and brought the stuff back, then a bunch of older gentlemen decided what it all meant and what was fit for the public to know about. (glibly out) I might get mostly corrected, with a few confirmations. Or I might just get firmly corrected altogether 😂. Either way my afternoon just got more interesting.
@hughdennison3013 Жыл бұрын
@bina nochtI reckon they cut the trees for heat and to provide expanse for protection and protection of their rabbits and dogs. The understory of hazel was used for food, animal feed and tools and fencing/huts copiced for tender shoots to eat or left for nuts, and the mounds as lookouts and allow the animals to be protected at night. That's roughly an idea I have anyway. The place was chosen in the first place because of the abundance of flint which made fire and weapons/blades, which were easy to trade in a short amount of time. Every part of history for me is about economy of effort. Unfortunately now we are a slave to our desires.....
@richardswaby6339 Жыл бұрын
@bina nocht I like your idea that farming was something that they were forced to do because of the destruction of forests. I read Yuval Noah Hari's book but I don't remember him suggesting this, although he did say that farming was extremely hard compared to hunter gathering but that people stuck to it because of the 'this time next year, Rodney" mentality.
@richardswaby6339 Жыл бұрын
@@hughdennison3013 I read that the English cut down the Irish Oaks to build ships for warmongering.
@SL-es5kb Жыл бұрын
I recommend James C Scott “against the grain”
@tommyxbones5126 Жыл бұрын
@@richardswaby6339 the English still lived in Europe not the British isles in the time that is being discussed
@LiamBaileyMusic Жыл бұрын
This is a good interview and I found it very insightful. Thank you. I think tho that that guy should debate Graham Hancock because that's who he's clearly cussing with all the pseudo. Graham is out there I hear that but I think some of both things can be true. For example why does the craftsmanship of the older Egyptian stuff have granite block cut with lazor precision and not after. But I love this conversation. I'm definitely up for the idea that humans like us have lost and forgotten skill and knowledge that allowed them to build those amazing megalithic monuments. Now we're dumber just doing up technology based on fire and combustion ect. Could have been different back then. It's like we've locked ourselves off things we used to deal wit
@umutcangun Жыл бұрын
Their fundamental premises (Hancock and Wengrow) are essentially the same.
@susanedwards3663 Жыл бұрын
Yes, I agree, a very interesting and insightful discussion. Such a shame he then went on to malign Graham Hancock and his theories. He also suggested that these pseudo theories are racist, by saying that one society was more technically evolved than another at a given time in history…. That’s a very uncalled for accusation, and an attempt to shut down a so called pseudo theory.
@brucetucker484711 ай бұрын
@@umutcangun No, they are not remotely the same. Wengrow never claims that people 50,000 years ago had technology equal to early 19th century Great Britain, he's saying that societies were probably more complex and cohesive than we think and that technological development has been more gradual and sometimes even reversible than previously thought. That's about as far from Hancock as Hancock is from L Ron Hubbard or Helena Blavatsky.
@brucetucker484711 ай бұрын
@@susanedwards3663 That's not why those theories are racist, and not why Wengrow says they are racist. They are racist because they're based on an assumption that "primitive brown people" couldn't have invented or accomplished anything unless superior European people had sailed in from the other side of the globe and taught them how to do it. he's basically making the British Empire (which was absolutely racist) his model for all human achievement before recorded history. And Hancock isn't labeled "pseudo" because people don't like his conclusions, he's labeled "pseudo" because he has no professional training or experience and either no idea of or complete contempt for the scientific method and other tools used by professionals. His only skill or qualification is having stayed in a Holiday Inn Express last night, and his method is to dream up fantasies he finds intriguing and then look for evidence to support them ignoring or lying about anything that doesn't suit that purpose.
@KaiHenningsen11 ай бұрын
This is so strange to me. The way he characterizes what "we Europeans" say about the ancient past is completely foreign to me (a German, which certainly counts as European). I don't think I've *ever* seen or heard a comparison of those people with pre-human primates. That's so absurd! And of course, we know very little about the time before humans started to write things down. Though we know astonishingly much about some after that point. (A dog walks into a bar ... or a customer complaint about substandard product ... absolutely the same kind of people as live today!) Hmm. Nation states. becoming more enclosed. You know, I live in the Schengen Area, and as such, my experience has been the opposite. Maybe the real problem is trying to pour all of history (and pre-history) into one, all-encompassing, linear growth (or shrink) framework when actually, it's comprised of many small pieces where the directions of those developments change from piece to piece. Hmm. I'd argue that science actually emerges exactly from those "other systems of knowledge", by noticing how much they got wrong and looking for ways to improve them (those ways are today known as the "scientific method"). And I'd argue that while there were no lab coats (though sometimes religious robes), there were certainly laboratories, that is, spaces where people experimented - usually parts of their normal workspaces. Everybody has likely experienced experiments with food preparation in the kitchen. We know about Galen's pig bladder experiments, for example. Shiths, and before them, stone knappers, certainly experimented to come up with all the advanced techniques they ended up with. Farmers with grain and animals. Hunters with hunting techniques. Gatherers with gatherable plants. That's sort of obvious. Hmm. I think I've heard enough from Captain Kirk, here. G'bye!
@quasimod11 ай бұрын
I don't know why this year-old video is popping up in our feeds again, but my BS-detector is maxxed out by this guy. The fact that cities pre-dated agriculture is well known, yet he presents it as his own amazing new idea. Then he misinterprets it. After a little Googling, I think he's just a political activist with an academic hustle. "Capitalism is bad, and I can prove it with psuedoscience". Meh.
@cosmicHalArizona11 ай бұрын
Exactly the way technologies build on each other, combining discoveries by neighbors & experimenters.
@davep78495 ай бұрын
@@quasimodexcellent, accurate summary
@vilnaukrana38914 ай бұрын
@@quasimod I think you nailed that just right. I was waiting when he finally will talk about his field research, but he is not archeologist, he is an ideologist, "properly groomed".
@alkhemiegypt Жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed this! (Nerdy confession: I watched it twice.) David Wengrow is a very engaging speaker. I got The Dawn of Everything for Xmas last year and loved it. So refreshing to hear alternative theories of history that are well-researched and supported by ample evidence.