Not exact matches
Today's police officers, soldiers, and politicians (like their
hunter -
gatherer forerunners) flourish
when certain qualities are in good supply among them: cunning, prowess, show of force, obedience, respect for hierarchy, readiness to take vengeance, and, above all, loyalty.
the purpose why God allowed multiple religions to evolve and exist in the distant and even today is because our minds intellectual capacity has increased tremendously after we became civilized about 10,000 years go.Earlier
when we were
hunter gatherers our priorities was just to find food to survive, Then we became more knowlegible and our concern includes the intelle tual need to understand the meaning and purpose of our existence, so God allowed the founding and establishment of many religions by humans to conform with their intellectual, social and educational development, Since this is not static, it contiually diversify and change to conform with their times of existince, History showed that this is continuesly improving, so the future expects changes towards Panthrotheism in accordance to His will.
When we were
hunter /
gatherers, we moved 8 - 14 miles a day.
She'd done it for health reasons — something about how in
hunter -
gatherer societies, people wouldn't be eating after dark, and our metabolisms aren't adapted to digest
when the sun is down, blah blah blah.
Back
when our ancestors were climbing trees and jumping across rocks and escaping predators as
hunter -
gatherers, their babies and toddlers literally clung on to them for support and protection.
Similar to their
hunter -
gatherer counterparts, many children in Western societies prefer play that mimics the things that adults do, Bruce Bower reported in «
When it's playtime, many kids prefer reality over fantasy» (SN: 2/17/18, p. 22).
Traditional
hunter -
gatherers in Tanzania don't consider height to be important
when choosing a partner, in contrast to western women, who favour tall men.
The other derives from reports of intergroup fighting among
hunter -
gatherers; our ancestors lived as
hunter -
gatherers from the emergence of the Homo genus until the Neolithic era,
when humans began settling down to cultivate crops and breed animals, and some scattered groups still live that way.
The reason we do not, I believe, is because it would have cost more energy than it was worth
when our aging process evolved long ago,
when our
hunter -
gatherer ancestors faced a constant struggle against hunger.
In the Middle East, says a British researcher,
hunters and
gatherers became farmers only
when hard times forced them to collect the seeds of wild wheat and barley intensively, and process them for food.
The closer a person is to the time
when his or her ancestors were
hunter -
gatherers, says Allison Goldfine, a physician and investigator at the Joslin Diabetes Center at Harvard University, «the higher the rates of weight gain.»
In 1962 James Neel suggested that early
hunter -
gatherers possessed a «thrifty gene» that helped them survive by speeding up the accumulation of fat
when food was available.
The newest studies provide the most robust confirmation yet that the domesticated dog evolved
when humans were still
hunter -
gatherers.
That's because the dog is the only animal to undergo the process
when humans were still nomadic
hunter -
gatherers.
The findings tell a different story from what researchers believe happened later in Europe,
when the first farmers moved in from Anatolia and largely replaced the
hunter -
gatherer populations who'd been living there.
From 50,000 years ago to 10,000 years ago,
when humans lived in small groups of
hunter -
gatherers, the rate of killing was «statistically indistinguishable» from the predicted rate of 2 %, based on archaeological evidence, Gómez and his colleagues report today in Nature.
ANCIENT NETWORKERS DNA from four Stone Age people — including the two shown here as they looked
when excavated, top, and at the time of death, bottom — suggests that
hunter -
gatherers have long formed groups with few close relatives.
Take heart America: US democracy's ability to stem autocracy is rooted in moral codes developed
when we were all
hunter -
gatherers, says Christopher Boehm
Peter Gordon, a psychologist at Columbia University in New York, says that even illiterate
hunter -
gatherers deal with probability
when making decisions about which trees are likely to yield fruit, for example.
When hunter -
gatherers in the Middle East began to settle down and cultivate crops about 10,500 years ago, they became the world's first farmers.
When people in
hunter -
gatherer communities have a conflict, Moyzis reports, usually one of them will just walk away.
Is this sense of fairness a holdover from the days
when we lived in close - knit
hunter -
gatherer groups, or did it evolve as society evolved?
When farmers encountered
hunter -
gatherers around 10,000 years ago, the interaction was more an explosion of love than hate, new DNA evidence suggests.
When our ancestors were living in the Paleolithic era, they were
hunter /
gatherers.
Today we have the same primal reward systems in place that guide our decisions around food as
when we were
hunter /
gatherers.
When the authors assumed that
hunter -
gatherers ate diets rich in lean meat, they estimated that over two - thirds of these groups consumed net acid - producing diets.
When scientists such as Loren Cordain examine the fossil record and written records of initial encounters with
hunter -
gatherers as well as other primates and how we process nutrients biochemically, it's a reasonable guess that the ranges of the combination of macro-nutrients in the average diet of our foraging ancestors were about: 22 - 40 % carbs, 19 - 35 % proteins, 28 - 47 % fats.
When we were
hunter gatherers he didn't eat 3 meals / day and we often long periods of time in between.
Our diets are not as rich in minerals as they would have been 10,000 years ago — back before agriculture,
when people lived as
hunter -
gatherers — we need to find new sources of trace minerals.
When Erik referenced our series and asked, «What do you think of the argument that low cholesterol in
hunter gatherer populations stems from infections and parasites?»
Our physiological aversion to loneliness stems from our days as
hunters and
gatherers,
when connection with others improved the odds of survival.
There's no escaping it
when you go camping, and I just can't see a paleolithic
hunter gatherer [3] scurrying around trying to block it out with animal hides.
It seems to me that the best thing we can do is retrain our taste buds to enjoy the natural flavors in real food, rather than catering to a «sweet tooth» which is essentially an atavistic response dating from times
when we were all
hunter /
gatherers.
Even
when the concept of organized hunting came along, it would appear that our
hunter -
gatherer ancestors relied more on superior tracking ability (using our highly evolved and exceptionally large brains) and walking (using our superior fat - burning systems), rather than on actually «chasing down» their prey.
These two books emphasize the need for humans to return to the diet that we ate
when we were primarily
gatherers, not
hunters.
In the days of our ancestors, the
hunter gatherers of the stone age
when they had no antibiotics, chemotherapy and all the advances of modern...
When humans went from mobile
hunter /
gatherer societies to sedentary villagers, they created a new ecological niche for neighboring wolves.
Underlying insulin resistance (low insulin sensitivity) is thought to be associated with a «thrifty gene» (16), which once enabled
hunter -
gatherers to utilize food efficiently, but is disadvantageous
when combined with an affluent lifestyle.
The video shows off a sort of fantasy - survival setting set in ancient times
when hunters &
gatherers lived.
Perhaps the best known of these journeys took place between 12,000 and 15,000 years ago,
when Ice Age
hunter -
gatherers migrated across the Bering Land Bridge — an isthmus exposed by retreating ocean levels during the Ice Age — into today's Alaska.
The diet follows a nutrition plan based on the eating habits of our ancestors from the Paleolithic period, between 2.5 million and 10,000 years ago,
when people were still
hunter -
gatherers.
Think back to
when our ancestors lived in caves and imagine yourself as your clan's
hunter -
gatherer.