Planetary Revolution : Transition of Human Beings and How did humans evolve from generation to generation?
History of Human Era
Imagine someone coming into your kitchen and taking a few tools, a pan and your garbage then bury everything in the woods. After many centuries later, an archeologist is trying to figure out who you were, what was important to you, what video games you played, what you believed in and what informed your decisions? Because you happened to live during a remarkable time in human history.
The planetary revolution, when humanity transitioned becoming a multi-planetary species. In that time our numbers would explode by orders of magnitude. Our technology and standard of living would improve to levels, previous thought impossible and our self conception would change forever. And all the future archeologist has to learn about your junk in the wood.
While we can only hope that this will be someone’s problem after centuries later. We have the same problem today, we are trying to reconstruct a revolution that took place many centuries ago. Today only shadows remain of the people who experienced our distant past as their present.
What remains from our past?
We can look at our present in crispy 4k in color and sound, three generations ago the world was just black and white. One more generation and and we see the world through blurred photographs.
Further back, paintings and texts become our main way of experiencing the past. A mere 20 generations before us today every written word has to be copied by hand and reports became more scarce and less reliable. The first historian lived a mere 100 generations ago, before him there was only epics and legends and dead kings bragging on pieces of stone. 250 generations ago there were only fragments left in the ground and images stripped to their original meaning. Eventually humanity becomes basically invisible. Still we do know some things about our ancestors. Let’s try to tell their story and what it means for us today.
The Greatest Transition in Human History
For some 2 million years, the life of our ancestors was basically the same. It was around twenty thousand years ago that the behaviorally modern humans began a process that would change our lifestyle forever.
At first gradually for some of us then faster for more of us and then suddenly for almost all of us. Back then there were about one million modern humans on Earth. Most other human species had died out probably with a little help from us. Our ancestors biology had given them the necessary tools, a general intelligence to understand things, a social intelligence to understand each other and language to express abstract ideas and create new concepts. These were people just like you. They suffered and experienced joy, were bored, cried and laughed. They lived in communities of a few dozen people. They controlled fire and had made tools (made from wood and stone and bone), told stories, mourned their dead and created art. They traded with other tribes from obsidian to shellfish, some hunted big game and were very mobile, other relied more on plants they collected and others mostly stayed in one area with an abundance of seafood. This was the common state of humanity for most of our history until a slow transition step by step turned into a revolution.
Step by Step
The first solid evidence for this stems from the Jordan Valley where our ancestors collected wild wheat more than 20,000 years ago. They noticed that seeds in the ground made more plants the next year, if they put good ones in one place the next year they had more of the good ones. This was a great supplement to hunting and gathering. You could prepare some crops return next year, build a temporary settlement and have a secure food supply. Our ancestors used these bonus to bake the first bread and brew the first beer.
With every generation they gathered deeper knowledge about the plants and animals around them and how to manipulate them to their advantage, but there was a lot to learn. Very slowly from generation to generation, pockets of knowledge expanded and were passed along to be expanded again.
This early agriculture started to drastically reduce the space of our ancestors needed to feed one individual, which made it possible to stay in one place longer.
Around 12,000 years ago, these little pieces of progress had reached to critical mass. Most of the calories we consume today stem from about 15 different founder crops that humans began to domesticate in earnest in the next few thousand years what we call the Agricultural Revolution, was not a thing began suddenly one day, it was a slow process driven by small groups by many generations. Eventually, gradual changes gave rise to new era.
The Human Era
During the next few thousand years progress would speed up and turn hunter-gatherers into farmers who lived in villages, towns and then cities. When farmers moved into New areas, they replaced the nomadic tribes or turned them into farmers too. This was neither easy nor painless.
In the early days people had a diverse diet, made up of upto 250 different plants and animals. For some of the groups, transitioning to agricultural the variation their diets declined drastically and some even seem to have been undernourished and living close together and with animals created a breeding ground for disease.
Virtually every infectious disease caused by microorganisms that have adapted to humans arose in the last 10,000 years. Cholera, smallpox, measles, influenza, chickenpox and malaria, mortality among children rose drastically still our numbers grew because living in the same place enabled women to bear far more children than before and for a farmer more kids mean more hands to work in the fields. Even with more people dying younger, villages and towns grew.
The number of humans on Earth exploded. About 100 generations after the beginning of the human era, there were already four million of us. This increased the need for food and forced people to come up with ever more efficient ways of farming, solidifying our new lifestyle. Going back to hunting and gathering would have just meant death by starvation for most.
One question remains unanswered “Why would people exchange the freedom of living off nature with a huge variety in food for the grind of agriculture and often more limited diets.” Nobody knows for sure.
Climate change seems to have made the transition possible and some scientists argue that it was caused by external factors like undernourishment or overpopulation, both highly contested.
Today the most widely accepted idea is that it was a deliberate choice made my countless communities around the globe. Maybe it’s also connected with what makes us a human. The ability to come together, develop, shared identities and exchange stories and knowledge.
Some archeologists think that groups of hunter-gatherers traveled long and far to celebrate to hold feasts and rituals. They would have used these occasions to talk about their version of innovation, better hunting and tool making techniques. How to catch and breed animals and which plats could be collected and multiplied. Maybe, they even exchanged seeds. It’s not unlikely that these gatherings were the catalyst that spread the knowledge of agriculture through the many isolated groups of humanity, ultimately ending a lifestyle that was common to our species for thousands of generations.
So by being able to come together, celebrate, share and learn from one another, these humans might have taken the steps that led to our modern world and we have much to be grateful for. We are still the same humans today even if it often doesn’t feel that way.
Maybe it’s time to come together to share what we know and celebrate our existence once again to begin another peaceful transition. Maybe the planetary revolution, that will change everything once more. So hopefully, in future, our descendants will look back on us today with gratitude, for the amazing world they are unable to inhabit.
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