Тёмный

The Big History of Civilizations | Origins of Agriculture | Wondrium 

Wondrium
Подписаться 584 тыс.
Просмотров 124 тыс.
50% 1

Want to stream more content like this… and 1,000’s of courses, documentaries & more?
👉 👉 Start Your Free Trial of Wondrium tinyurl.com/2c2yf8en 👈 👈
-------------------------------------------
Learn more about this course and start your FREE trial of The Great Courses Plus here: wondrium.com/youtube/lp/t2/ge...
What makes the Big History approach so unique? Whereas a traditional survey might take you through the major events of a period and introduce you to key dates and people (the “kings and battles” approach), Big History zooms out to bring larger trends into focus, from the type of geography best suited for civilization to the way climate patterns drive human activity like the transition into agriculture.
00:00 Transition From Foraging to Farming
03:42 How Foraging and Farming Differ
08:18 Remains of Ohalo II and Domestication
12:37 Climate Change Facilitates Transition to Farming
19:01 Humans Adopt Less Nomadic Lifestyles
22:48 The Trap of Sedentism and Its Consequences
25:33 Ways of Increasing Productivity for Land
27:41 Evidence of Transition to Farming
One major trend you’ll uncover is that, regardless of time or place, civilizations require certain “Goldilocks factors” to succeed. At all scales-the cosmic, the planetary, the ecological, and the human-you can view moments where a combination of just-right ingredients creates the necessary conditions to cross the next threshold of complexity. A few such unique conditions that Professor Benjamin examines are:
-Climate changes during the Paleolithic Era
-The relationship between the agricultural revolution and human population growth
-The relationship between power and the rise of early city-states
-The spread of ideas along Silk Roads and other trade routes
-The Industrial Revolution and the development of consumer capitalism
-Peak oil, climate change, over-population, and other near-future scenarios
Don’t forget to subscribe to our channel - we are adding new videos all the time! ru-vid.com_...
#nowisthetimetolearn #learnwithme #neverstoplearning #lifelonglearning #thegreatcoursesplus

Опубликовано:

 

31 май 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 50   
@DK-ng6nd
@DK-ng6nd 3 года назад
Brilliant lecture, concise and informative.
@fuegosmoke5342
@fuegosmoke5342 Год назад
Explained with a lot of enthousiasm. Thank you!
@Queila153
@Queila153 3 года назад
I really agree 💯 with this public lecture and I request this lecture need to held too all over the world, cos in modern day society undermining agriculture sectore which is ignoring the foundation of human civilzation history. ✊🇹🇱✊ I Will always support this channel in my entire online learning. My support from East Timor🇹🇱🇹🇱🇹🇱
@joshuatraffanstedt2695
@joshuatraffanstedt2695 3 года назад
Easily the most important revolutions in human history.
@prechagirl
@prechagirl 2 года назад
Great lecture. However why does the lecturer use different formats of eras BP BCE?
@johnfajer7691
@johnfajer7691 3 года назад
This presentation was amazing! Thank you!
@SunShine-sn9ek
@SunShine-sn9ek 5 лет назад
Thank you so much for this great lecture
@Zathinean
@Zathinean 5 лет назад
It’s funny to see him spin awkwardly every minute to a different camera angle.
@ericnyamu9981
@ericnyamu9981 5 лет назад
the full spinning , lol
@PeteMorrow
@PeteMorrow 4 года назад
Literally came to the comments to say this. All these 90° camera switches are making me dizzy. Good lecture though.
@xpsmango4146
@xpsmango4146 4 года назад
Probably this would help editing (?) The lecture is very interesting.
@schoolactivities2789
@schoolactivities2789 2 года назад
my nose bleed actually.😅
@btetschner
@btetschner 2 года назад
What a great video! Very interesting, thank you for the video.
@JulianFoxaustralia
@JulianFoxaustralia 5 лет назад
Great video, thanks.
@mariafortuny6078
@mariafortuny6078 4 года назад
Thanks a lot. Great explanation.
@robertbecker6795
@robertbecker6795 3 года назад
Thank you
@jaivardhansinghjatav8178
@jaivardhansinghjatav8178 3 года назад
Awesome !
@theroadupward
@theroadupward 2 года назад
Nice explanation. But the "healthy hunter gatherer" vs. the "stressed farmer" paradigm ignores one big fact. HG's could at any time starve to death. They knew this. No fridge. Find food daily or die. Grains could be stored, domestic animals are in the pen. This is a big deal.
@Frog154
@Frog154 4 года назад
Awesome :)
@LuxisAlukard
@LuxisAlukard 2 года назад
As Lindybeige said: "This agriculture experiment isn't really working for humans, it's been going on for only 12000 years..."
@Brandonhayhew
@Brandonhayhew 3 года назад
Foraging sucks because they savaging around and little foo is often find but another option is hunting but it takes time to hunt a good pray
@rooty
@rooty 3 года назад
That's not why it sucked, if you watch the video. There was plenty of food and very healthy variety, as well as ensuring good physical fitness. It sucked because they had to kill their elders and infants (including 50% of all female newborns) because they were less able to forage and migrate.
@roberrplatt4214
@roberrplatt4214 3 года назад
Yes. Some romantic people think humans are best as 'noble savages' but that lifestyle makes it difficult to have babies.
@novelkars835
@novelkars835 2 года назад
Ohalo was settled by Kebarans or proto-Kebarans. Natufians didn't exist 25,000 years ago. I think the later spread of agriculture largely because of competitive advantage in conjunction with other technologies, basically being better at squatting over new lands.
@RinkuYadav-uw6fs
@RinkuYadav-uw6fs 3 года назад
Love from india
@dimitardimitrakov2841
@dimitardimitrakov2841 2 года назад
Didnt understand why the dog was so essential to be the first step of the domestication project. It might be so and evidence to be so but still...why?
@MegaBeast1212
@MegaBeast1212 4 года назад
What was the global timing of the agricultural revolution ?
@Wondrium
@Wondrium 4 года назад
It's 11,500 years ago depending on the area!
@webbstar303
@webbstar303 2 года назад
great clear lecture, although (i'm very new to this topic) am hearing/reading that climate change and over population is a very simplistic dated and over used theory......
@bubaks2
@bubaks2 3 года назад
2:35 Bangladesh? Strange choice for an example.
@621prakash
@621prakash 5 лет назад
The video is good on information supply but i failed to understand the need of the presenter to keep rotating every 2 minutes in the video.....it was distracting and gave a bad taste to the video.....editors please aviod this!
@Wondrium
@Wondrium 5 лет назад
Thanks for the feedback, Prakash!
@joshuatraffanstedt2695
@joshuatraffanstedt2695 3 года назад
So youd question and ponder the meaning of life.
@michaelbujaki2462
@michaelbujaki2462 3 года назад
@@Wondrium I actually don't mind it when the speaker changes position when the topic changes.
@jimbrown5268
@jimbrown5268 2 года назад
I thought it was quite well timed
@Felix00007
@Felix00007 2 года назад
Dr Stone anime🔥
@staticxtract3023
@staticxtract3023 4 года назад
I know we suck as humans but this stuff is pretty cool
@youeverpickyourfeetinpough3822
@youeverpickyourfeetinpough3822 3 года назад
The wheat genome is 5x more complex than the human genome and scientists cannot explain how this hybrid seed suddenly burst onto the agri scene 10-12K years ago... #copperturnsbloodblue
@psingh9248
@psingh9248 3 года назад
indian farmers stand with all farmers - repeal all laws in india
@ribblemcdibble
@ribblemcdibble 3 года назад
Foraging requires 2km sq for each person - agriculture allows 2000 people per sq km? Not including the land for food growth!?! - incredibly misleading! Not a lecture for me!
@michaelbujaki2462
@michaelbujaki2462 3 года назад
You're right, it doesn't make sense. If there are 2,000 people in a square kilometer, then each person has 500 square meters to live on.
@Pablo123456x
@Pablo123456x 5 лет назад
This guy has more spin than Fox News
@colegiohaciendalosalcaparr7091
Qhubo
@waseem2497
@waseem2497 3 года назад
Hey I am from India
@danfield6030
@danfield6030 2 года назад
"I am not a vegetarian simply beacause vegetable crops monopolize the land ,limiting the life forms and ecosystem. A huge amount of land is dedicated to these crops. While animals can be raised on land with a diverse ecosystem...."_Neil Degrass Tyson
@roberrplatt4214
@roberrplatt4214 3 года назад
If people learned where they came from, maybe they wouldn't make epochally stupid mistakes every twelve minutes of their lives. Like they do!
@prakashtalesara777
@prakashtalesara777 2 года назад
Nothing. First rice grown
@dee-je1vx
@dee-je1vx 2 года назад
too much topic to cover, too wide and random
@mkevin84
@mkevin84 27 дней назад
is this lecture from a religious institution?
@najatskitchen
@najatskitchen 2 года назад
A correction, the sea of Galilee is in Palestine. And in Arabic , بحيرة طبريا
Далее
Maize: The Engine of American Civilization
23:36
Просмотров 241 тыс.
TREE(3) (extra footage) - Numberphile
11:02
Просмотров 711 тыс.
How do fungi cause disease in humans?
3:41
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.