Originally posted by Pabmusic
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Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind on Radio 4 is excellent !!!!!
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostI'm not quite clear what you seem to be saying. Are you inferring that humans can mate with chimps and produce offspring; or even, Heaven Forfend, that this may have already happened?
[Edit] I think I'm disparaging the French; it was a Russian:
We have only 23 pairs of chromosomes, whereas the other apes have 24 (our chromosome 2 is the result of the fusion of two others at some time within the last 6 million years or so) and that might have been a barrier, but apparently not.Last edited by Pabmusic; 10-09-14, 11:16.
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostSo the rather hirsute, simian little chap who appears in the Conan Doyle short story The Six Napoleons may be descended from...but surely the world is not ready for such a story.
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Originally posted by mercia View Posthmmmm - finding it difficult to understand that a 'belief' in the existence of a car manufacturing company (his example) is the same as a belief in a god or fairies - i.e. that they are all equally imaginary. [Except they are all inventions of the human mind, but for rather different reasons.]
His point about Peugeot Cars seemed to be that, despite the death of its 'inventor' Monsieur Peugeot, it still exists as a company and that even if, overnight, all its employees died and all its plant was destroyed it would still 'exist' as a company. True I suppose, but it seems to me he could equally have chosen the East India Company or the Hanseatic League or the Roman Army, other human 'inventions', which by any usual understanding of the word no longer 'exist' ... except as names in history books.
My pocket says I shall have to wait for this book to come out in paperback.
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Tom A. Thanks so much for bringing this book to our notice! Just heard episodes 1 & 2 on i-player and am about to catch up on 3 & 4.
What amazing clarity of writing and of reading. Its style reminds me (although the subject matter couldn't be more different) of This Sceptred Isle...of many episodes, long ago; very authoritatively read by Anna Massey.
hmmmm - finding it difficult to understand that a 'belief' in the existence of a car manufacturing company (his example) is the same as a belief in a god or fairies - i.e. that they are all equally imaginary. [Except they are all inventions of the human mind, but for rather different reasons.
His point about Peugeot Cars seemed to be that, despite the death of its 'inventor' Monsieur Peugeot, it still exists as a company and that even if, overnight, all its employees died and all its plant was destroyed it would still 'exist' as a company.
Can't wait to continue.....
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Richard Tarleton
A strange experience ordering this. Automated reply from Amazon giving estimated delivery date of 15 March 2015 - I'm certain I didn't order the paperback. I cancelled, reordered, delivery Monday.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostA strange experience ordering this. Automated reply from Amazon giving estimated delivery date of 15 March 2015 - I'm certain I didn't order the paperback. I cancelled, reordered, delivery Monday.According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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I’ve listened to the first two episodes but I don’t think I’ll bother with the rest. I found the manner of reading too patronising and a lot of what the author is saying seems to be based on a kind of comforting (not sure if this is the right word but it seems to be reflected in the voice of the reader) assumptions about how and what ‘we’ do which no other animals are capable of doing. You never know. It maybe that no other animals were foolish enough to do what our ancestors started, which we still do.
I have to admit that I listened to the programme with a rather low opinion about the author, having read (started reading to be precise) this article.
Does modern life make us happy? We have gained much but we have lost a great deal too. Are humans better suited to a hunter-gatherer lifestyle?
Does modern life make us happy? We have gained much but we have lost a great deal too, argues Yuval Noah Harari. Are humans better suited to a hunter-gatherer lifestyle?
As far as I read, the author talks about happiness as if there were a thing called happiness like water or empires. These days, I don’t seem to have much patience to read this sort of articles.Last edited by doversoul1; 12-09-14, 17:27.
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Originally posted by doversoul View PostI’ve listened to the first two episodes but I don’t think I’ll bother with the rest. I found the manner of reading too patronising and a lot of what the author is saying seems to be based on a kind of comforting (not sure if this is the right word but it seems to be reflected in the voice of the reader) assumptions about how and what ‘we’ do which no other animals are capable of doing. You never know. It maybe that no other animals were foolish enough to do what our ancestors started, which we still do.
I have to admit that I listened to the programme with a rather low opinion about the author, having read (started reading to be precise) this article.
Does modern life make us happy? We have gained much but we have lost a great deal too. Are humans better suited to a hunter-gatherer lifestyle?
Does modern life make us happy? We have gained much but we have lost a great deal too, argues Yuval Noah Harari. Are humans better suited to a hunter-gatherer lifestyle?
As far as I read, the author talks about happiness as if there were a thing called happiness like water or empires. These days, I don’t seem to have much patience to read this sort of articles.
From what I've heard the recommendations here are a bit exaggerated.
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I intend to listen to all 5 extracts, but from what I have gleaned so far, there's not much new. The late lamented Malcolm Caldwell made most the points about agriculture versus hunting and gathering in his "The Wealth of Some Nations" (1977), and what he had to say about the relative labour intensity of the two owed a heavy (acknowledged) debt to Romanian enonometrist Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen's "The Entropy Law and the Economic Process" of 1971.
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I think it's worth a listen Bryn. We're not maybe getting the latest slant on the science of anthropology. There are some genuinely original and amusing thoughts here, e.g. wheat is the villain that has cultivated man. It's one person's ideas and his way of expressing them...and clearly and forthrightly read. I was entertained, and did not feel in the least 'patronised' .
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