Evolution of Culture

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 73

  • @kingdombound5574
    @kingdombound5574 Před rokem +1

    EXCELLENT! The best I've heard Evolution explained...using the latest findings as of 2022! If we ever find a way to dig up the Sahara Desert, especially in Sudan/Nubian area...EXCITING!

  • @charlie-rc7mf
    @charlie-rc7mf Před 4 lety +4

    Love watching your videos..even more than once!

  • @yankov11
    @yankov11 Před 5 lety +4

    Just discovered this channel. Hope to see more Sheila

  • @robertrhoden8392
    @robertrhoden8392 Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you for truth and clarity, at last. If Europeans, et al, finally embrace what other great civilisations have known for eons, and then include it in their school curriculums, we can really move forward in our understanding of who we are as humans. Supposed intellectuals who do not condemn that ‘Ethnocentric’ thinking, and confirm how it has destructively inhibited our growth as humans, will be judged by the future generations to come.

    • @geoffreystuttle8080
      @geoffreystuttle8080 Před 4 lety +2

      And Europeans are the only ones guilty of being Ethnocentric, I suppose? We'll get even further in our understanding when Europeans are no longer the only ones upon whom all the evils of human nature are heaped.

    • @gr-xw3sp
      @gr-xw3sp Před rokem

      Refer to reply to Sheila above.

  • @luism5514
    @luism5514 Před 3 lety +1

    Oh “a light switch turned on in humans all over the world!” LMAO. The mental gymnastics needed to attempt to discredit the fact that human culture evolved on the Eurasian steppe is astounding really.

  • @DocMatthews0311
    @DocMatthews0311 Před rokem

    We all know that Africa is the Cradle of Culture… People of the African Diaspora own and cultivate culture in every land they settle in.

  • @dimitriosfromgreece4227
    @dimitriosfromgreece4227 Před 4 lety +3

    AMAZING VIDEO ❤ LOVE YOU 100%

  • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885

    the gibbons are still pissed we did not include them in Hominids. Hence the choral hooting and singing.

  • @muskduh
    @muskduh Před rokem

    Thanks for the video!

  • @eevans5477
    @eevans5477 Před rokem

    I have a question, the first colonists settled in the Americas in 1607 and the first man walked on the moon in 1969. Man advanced in 362 years to land on the moon. So in millions years man waited around doing nothing and in 362 years they put a man on the moon.

  • @FacesintheStoneShorts

    Very interesting at this Mound site to find hominoid Effigys, Stones, in the shape of human faces, and some of them look like early hominoids.

  • @jimmyjumbo2006
    @jimmyjumbo2006 Před 4 lety +1

    Fascinating, thanks so much.

  • @harikahari2415
    @harikahari2415 Před rokem

    tnku for the info

  • @cib.4223
    @cib.4223 Před 2 lety

    Correct, makes sense to me!!

  • @user-uw8dy5lz7p
    @user-uw8dy5lz7p Před 3 lety

    Well done.Thank you.

  • @Alan-Zorro
    @Alan-Zorro Před 3 lety

    Makes a lot of sense.

  • @davemurray4858
    @davemurray4858 Před 3 lety

    Amazing videos.

  • @mattmatty4670
    @mattmatty4670 Před 2 lety

    Cool thanks mate

  • @fishisnotfishfish2267
    @fishisnotfishfish2267 Před 4 lety

    Doesnt the universe become more complex over time, humans maybe are just an extension of that?

  • @loopvil369
    @loopvil369 Před 2 lety

    No mention of neanderthals and denisovans already having culture and passing that onto the Europeans

  • @macdermesser
    @macdermesser Před 4 lety +6

    You lost me when you mentioned the cultural privilege of Europe.

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice Před 3 lety

      So fragile you are

    • @loopvil369
      @loopvil369 Před 2 lety +3

      Pretty easy to follow

    • @captain669
      @captain669 Před rokem +1

      Whats difficult about that unless you think Americans have culture apart from gob and guns.

    • @fintonmainz7845
      @fintonmainz7845 Před rokem

      The dim will always be with us. Don't worry.

    • @1917girl
      @1917girl Před rokem +2

      sorry you don't understand the legacy of colonization

  • @gr-xw3sp
    @gr-xw3sp Před rokem

    Sheila as a scientist myself I must tell you that scientists shouldn't be moved one way or another by some ideas being "problematic" or not, something that seems to be your central concern. To illustrate what a scientist is I would refer to the quintessence of scientists: people like Galileo facing the inquisition or Charles Darwin, daring to question, based on facts, religious dogmas of an entire civilization. What do we see in them? Well, courage, and scientific integrity to stand by the truth of their findings no matter what. What Galileo and Darwin did was "problematic," extremely "problematic," can't you see it? Courage and scientific integrity is what today is required of scientists to assume their historical role in society, which is ruthless objectivity, and properly respond to "woke" fanatic cults.

    • @asdfgzxcvb7680
      @asdfgzxcvb7680 Před rokem

      Eurocentrism is a racist, fanatic cult that bends reality to fit its ideology. It’s not scientific, it’s biased. Calling out ‘problematics’ encourages more rigorous scientific inquiry. It’s not about being ‘woke’, even if the increasing polarity between left and right is all over the internet/media. Science should call out the limitations of bias, which includes racial bias, and bring it to people’s attention in this political climate regardless of affiliation.

  • @stendak
    @stendak Před 3 měsíci

    Neanderthals achieved all these cultural markers before humans in Africa. I understand the motivation to correct eurocentric thinking, but this goes too far. Maybe sapiens encountering Neanderthals sped cultural development in Europe.

  • @luism5514
    @luism5514 Před 3 lety

    Then why isn’t Africa developed? They had a 200k year head start, far before colonialism or slavery.

  • @fredkelly6953
    @fredkelly6953 Před 4 lety

    With all this social distancing I think my neocortex is shrinking.

    • @ArnieD17
      @ArnieD17 Před 3 lety

      The joke may be on you. There appears to be some evidence that that is possible.

  • @Jarry17
    @Jarry17 Před 3 lety +2

    The idea that culture emerged in Europe is the result of a bias. However, how more sympathetic the idea of all humans are equal and contributed equally to culture may be, it is just as much a bias.

    • @colkurtz5964
      @colkurtz5964 Před 3 lety

      Is the notion that man emerged from Africa, also a bias?

  • @luism5514
    @luism5514 Před 3 lety

    Why didn’t Africans conduct their own archeological research? Why didn’t they do it hundreds of years before Europeans? After all, they got settled first given we all came from there. Eurasians were too busy migrating.

  • @Gdad-20
    @Gdad-20 Před 2 lety

    Not every human knows how to do culture! Modern day culture shows us that. Not every human brain functions in accordance with cultural expectations.
    Culture is built upon current concencus, which turns out to be, what the majority expect each individual to bring to the party.
    A person with brain damage, or mental issues, don`t simply just do culture!!!
    So this talk begins with a mighty big assumption, that is completely wrong.
    How many other assumptions have been shoe horned into helping this theory win favour?

  • @casiandsouza7031
    @casiandsouza7031 Před 4 lety

    You put man in your definition of culture. You must have rolled off the assembly line of a prestigious institution.

  • @carriersailor2474
    @carriersailor2474 Před 4 lety +1

    Once African-based Humans left Africa, they evolved differently all over the world. So much so that today, the difference between a Caucasian and Black African skeleton can be easily shown by forensic bone experts. From skeletons to skin color we all evolved to the many races/Population Groups. Better to stick with Population Groups, as most Anthropologists do today. One reason they do so, is to avoid having the PC among them start yelling "Racist" or "Nazi" when they make accurate points like this. It's reasonable to think that, along with bones and skin color, that the very impactful brain would also see some evolutionary changes in the various out-of-Africa Humans as they evolved. And also among the different African Population groups that evolved. The Bantu, for instance, are very racially distinct from the tall, thin Sudanese and the very short Bushmen such as the San. Lets not be blinded by PC as we take a look at these aspects of "Evolution in Man," shall we?

  • @vanderdole02
    @vanderdole02 Před 4 lety +1

    made for ten year old americans, or 6 year old europeans, not worth watching..

  • @rogerwelsh2335
    @rogerwelsh2335 Před 3 lety

    This was not worth 45 minutes that’s for sure. Unless you are a young student

  • @peterklevius4566
    @peterklevius4566 Před rokem

    Sally McBrearty's and Alison Brooks' emotionally biased guesswork from 2000, predates Homo floresiensis (2004), Denisova bracelet (2008) and Denisovan DNA (2010-12). Why is this "afropologist" video presented in such an uncritical way?! Already 1992 in my book Demand for Recources, I pointed out that the oldest "Africans" with "mongoloid" (i.e. cold adapted features) may be connected to the big skulled (1,400 cm3) but equally "mongoloid" flat faced 280,000 BP Jinniushan fossil from northern China, which I wrongly thought was a male, but now we know the skeleton belonged to a female, which makes it the biggest female Homo fossil ever found. My question in the book was: Why didn't she or her descendants go to the Moon when they had all time in the world to do so? Moreover, an other Swede, Nobel prize winner Svante Pääbo, after having discovered Denisovan, also sees share my view, i.e. that something happened with the intelligence of Homo sapiens some 50-60,000 BP, precisely because of the sudden jump in sophistication which is evident with the findings in the Denisova cave in Siberia. 2012 I explained Pääbo's finding as the result of a better packed Homo brain from SE Asian archioelago due to island shrinking and later mainland connection - the latest in a series that created Homo sapiens. Hybridization did the rest and also explains the variety of fossil species.

  • @nayanmipun6784
    @nayanmipun6784 Před 4 lety

    Well but hope this human female's "Choice" should not be a pro Abortion agenda