Its an interesting question where science originated. I think a lot of creativity goes into science, and I wouldn't rule out poetry as an influence.Edit: but maybe science is an offshoot if poetry. From where and how did the idea to make stone tools originally spring from?
Edit: ignore my last comment. Obviously it’s the actions of memory, observation, etc — Brett
I'll answer that. Stone tools could have been made in isolation. It's only when they start sharing and passing down their knowledge, do politics get involved. Or it could have been a peaceful and pleasant act of cooperation. No one knows until they start researching hominids.Do you think politics, as I define it, was part of her life. Tools can’t have been made in isolation. Even if she was part of only a family I still see politics as part of that dynamic.
Edit: if they’re making tools then they’ve entered a complex state. — Brett
For my own interests, in an effort to try and put modern times into perspective, to put together some framework for looking at things, I’ve tried to break humanity up into manageable sections, to then see where they might crossover, how they’re influenced, or to see if I missed something, or if my four pillars are an accurate way to break it up. — Brett
Harari surveys the history of humankind in the Stone Age up to the twenty-first century, focusing on Homo sapiens. He divides the history of Sapiens into four major parts:
1. The Cognitive Revolution (c. 70,000 BCE, when Sapiens evolved imagination).
2.The Agricultural Revolution (c. 10,000 BCE, the development of agriculture).
3. The unification of humankind (the gradual consolidation of human political organisations towards one global empire).
4. The Scientific Revolution (c. 1500 CE, the emergence of objective science). — Yuval Noah Harari
The precursor was more likely hunter-gatherer pattern recognition, which gave a survival advantage over other species. The faculty, which evolved into a genetic propensity, caused false inferences to be made when human events coincided with unexplainable phenomena, an obvious example being tribal rain dances. — dex
Inherently as in a basis in genetics? Like, would an island nation of 10 aborigines without knowledge of mass societies start engaging in machiavellianism? — dex
Thats really interesting. If only @Brett put the same amount of thought and effort into his OP as our ancestors put into making tools, perhaps we would all make more progress. :wink:Napping requires considerable dexterity; there is more to it than banging rocks together. The conchoidal fractures on the example pictured are the result of selection of the material and careful striking to produce a useable edge. This type of tool was used for more than a million years, so the technique was passed to subsequent generations. — Banno
Is that genetic? — Brett
Well, I'm with @Banno in this: no arbitrary list of "pillars" is compelling; categorical extrapolations from anthropological 'data' are pseudo (as per e.g. Hume's guillotine, Lukács' hypostatization, etc).I was thinking about how humanity seems to keep on behaving in the same way throughout history. So I wanted to try and prioritise those things that drive us that way. And if those four pillars, as I call them, are the basic superstructure to our lives. — Brett
Would you refer to chimpanzees as political? — dex
You can't divorce the word 'politic' from its original Greek meaning because politics is a Greek word.
— Wheatley
I’m using politics as a form of interaction between people. “The affairs of the city” are the affairs of the people. First the people then the institutions.
5 hours ago — Brett
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