How to change the course of human history. The story we have been telling ourselves about our origins is wrong, and perpetuates the idea of inevitable social inequality. David Graeber and David Wengrow ask why the myth of ‘agricultural revolution’ remains so persistent, and argue that there is a whole lot more we can learn from our ancestors.
Oct 28, 2021 · March 2, 2018David Graeber, David Wengrow: How to change the course of human history (at least, the part that’s already happened) (2018)https://www.eurozine....
Apr 07, 2018 · How to change the course of human history? (at least, the part that’s already happened) ... Graber made a series of studies of economic history that articulate and analyse with archaeological, political and philosophical evidence the depth of human behaviour linked to exchange and “duty” as a moral and economic phenomenon. Graber rejects ...
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I didn't realize this eBook existed until I read their longer version, The Dawn of Everything, and found a YouTube reading of this text. Clearly this is the "shorter pamphlet" they mention that gave rise to the longer book. The verbiage is nearly exact to the longer, fleshed out version.
He saw that staphylococcus was contaminated with blue green mould from an open window, more importantly bacteria were unable to grow anywhere near the mould. 1. Hitler Was About To Be A Painter.
About 3 years later Osama bin Ladin plotted 9/11 and killed about 2,996 people, injured more than 6,000 others, and caused at least $10 billion worth of property and infrastructure damage.
Hiroshima & Nagasaki Were Bombed Due to A Misunderstood Word. Perhaps one misinterpreted Japanese word boosted the decision of president Harry S. Truman to order atomic bombing on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Penicillin antibiotics were among the first and most important antibiotics to be effectively work against bacterial infections . However, the story of its discovery is also quite fascinating. Apparently a Scottish scientist named Alexander Fleming was experimenting with staphylococcus, but he went on a vacation lasted for two weeks. Interestingly he left staphylococcus in a Petri dish. When he returned, he witnessed one of the most astonishing event in the history of medicine.
He applied to academy of fine arts Vienna for drawing classes, when he was 18 years old but got rejected, but he didn’t gave up and applied again one year later. Again he got rejected and didn’t become an artist. What he became eventually is an ugly history. Written By: Khizar Hasan.
As you might have guessed by now, that key is extremely valuable in today’s time, because the key could have saved Titanic from sinking and hundreds of people from dying. The key was auctioned and a Chinese man bought it for £90,000.
When reporters asked Japanese premier “Kantaro Suzuki” about Potsdam declaration for unconditional surrender during World war II, he replied with a word “Mokusatsu”, that probably meant “no comments “. But the word have multiple meanings and some people translated it to “we are ignoring the declaration “. This is how it was reported ...
They hated cities, which could be profitably converted into pastureland for their ponies, so they erased them everywhere they went . An anonymous advisor urged the Great Khan to spare the Chinese for tax purposes; this is the reason why people still reside in northern China today. No such luck prevailed in Iran, where the Mongols burned the cities, smashed the irrigation networks, and killed—at a first approximation—everybody.
Asia in the year 1200 was a hodgepodge of overlapping empires and principalities. Smaller kingdoms abounded, such as those created by the crusader knights in Syria and Lebanon. Nobody had any idea what was about to hit.
As a twelve-year-old boy, the future Khan (then known as Temujin) lost his father, a tribal chieftain, when he was poisoned by Tartars. Things like that usually ended with the slain chieftain’s whole family being wiped out, but Temujin escaped into the wilderness with his mother and a few loyal supporters.
The collapse of negotiations became known as the “October Surprise,” and the consensus among historians is that it played a key role in putting Nixon over the top in the next month’s election. In 1973, peace was agreed to by the parties on terms that were substantially identical to those proposed in 1968.
Before the Mongols, Islamic lands—Baghdad in particular—were learning havens. Science, philosophy, and art thrived under the protection of these stable, prosperous sultanates. All of that was trampled by the hooves of the Mongols’ ponies.
Sometimes you can go back to a particular moment in history and say that if it hadn’t been for one person, things would have been very different. This is the story of five of those people.
Enter Kissinger. Sensing opportunity in the summer of 1968, Kissinger made contact with John Mitchell, who then served as Nixon’s campaign manager. Using Madame Anna Chennault as a go-between, Kissinger opened a private channel to the government of South Vietnamese president Thieu. Hinting very strongly that the impending peace treaty would be unfavorable to South Vietnam, Kissinger persuaded Thieu to withdraw from talks, effectively sabotaging the peace process.