• @niktemadur@lemmy.world
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      1211 months ago

      On a cultural television channel from Mexico, there was a weekly recurring host panel of five or six academics in different fields, all with their PhDs in literature, linguistics, history, political science, etc. La Dichosa Palabra (The Blessed Word) was the name of the show.

      Anyway, one of the panelists always seemed to trace the etymology of every word to the name of such-and-such goddess from antiquity.

      One or two times, ok sure, you get dazzled by the erudition. But when it happens over and over and over again with any word no matter how seemingly trivial, it all acquires a strong whiff of confirmation bias bullshit with nobody to call him out on it.

  • rockerface 🇺🇦
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    731 year ago

    It’s amazing to put into perspective how long both bronze and stone ages really took, especially compared to modernity. Human brains are not good at imagining large quantities or intervals, so it was all kinda smushed up into a folder labeled “past” in my head

    • @ogeist@lemmy.world
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      541 year ago

      To give some numbers, the last period of the stone age (Neolithic) lasted around 2000 years and the bronze age around 1600 years. No wonder they “forgot” what the stone age tools were.

    • ConfusedPossum
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      291 year ago

      Kurzgesagt did this video where they crammed all of Earth’s history in an hour. Basically you look at a barren wasteland for most of the time until life finally goes macroscopic and then all of humanity happens in less than a second

      I sat through the whole thing and it’s still incomprehensible

      • @samus12345@lemmy.world
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        181 year ago

        It’s gotten so fast that we now see significant changes in our lifetimes - cultural, technology, climate. For most of human history, it took many generations for any real change to occur.

        Japan might be the record holder for fastest significant change, though. Feudalism to a modern industrial economy in a few decades.

        • @KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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          1011 months ago

          Please. The USSR industrialization speed run is unsurpassed. Peasants to the first artificial satellite in 40 years. Also, parts of Russia are still completely undeveloped today!

  • @MataVatnik@lemmy.world
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    471 year ago

    I can’t even remember why I bought the chives that are sitting in my fridge, we can probably give them a break.

  • Hegar
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    1 year ago

    A lot of these hand axes may have had some kind of not-strictly-functional purpose during their heydey in the stone ages as well. Heaps of them show no evidence of wear or use and are noticably gorgeous - just really pleasingly shaped.

      • Hegar
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        61 year ago

        Kind of like modern pickup trucks

        Except nice to look at, yep!

        Pick ups seem like a great example because they are so often a status/identify token.

        • @Usernameblankface@lemmy.world
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          411 months ago

          I also don’t find them particularly good looking, but their owners sure do!

          I like identity token for trucks that never see truck use.

  • @Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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    2011 months ago

    Not surprised, oral history…

    Being able to write things down has to be one of the more important inventions.

    I seriously suspect if dolphins and whales, ways of storing information they might be more intelligent than us.