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What Happened Before History? Human Origins

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    The world we live in feels normal, ordinary.
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    It feels like this is just how humans exist and always existed.
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    But, it's not.
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    Never before have we humans lived in a world as sophisticated and engineered to our needs as today.
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    Giving us the luxury to forget about ourselves and not worry about survival.
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    Food, shelter, security – all of this is, more or less, taken for granted.
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    But we're a special few; for more than 99.99% of human history, life was completely different.
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    And there's no such thing as just one human history.
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    Our story begins 6 million years ago, when the tribe of hominini split and our relationship with the apes ended.
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    2.8 million years ago, the genus of homo, the first humans, emerged.
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    We like to think about ourselves as the only humans, but this is far from the truth.
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    When we, homo sapiens sapiens, came into existence 200,000 years ago, there were at least six other human species around.
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    Cousins of comparable intelligence and ability, which must have been incredibly scary, kind of like living with aliens.
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    Some of them were very successful.
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    Homo erectus, for example, survived for 2 million years.
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    Ten times longer than modern humans have existed.
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    The last of the other humans disappeared around 10,000 years ago.
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    We don't know what caused them to die out.
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    Modern humans have at least a few percent of neanderthal and other human DNA, so there was some mixing,
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    but certainly not enough to be a merger between species.
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    So we don't know if our cousins went away because they lost the battle over resources, or because of a series of minor genocides.
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    Either way, only we remain.
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    Back to the beginnings of humanity.
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    2.8 million years ago, early humans used tools, but did not make a lot of progress for nearly 2 million years.
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    Until they learned to control fire.
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    Fire meant cooking, which made food more nutritious, which contributed to the development of our brain.
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    It also produced light and warmth, which made days longer and winters less gruesome.
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    On top of that, it not only scared predators away, it could also be used for hunting.
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    A torched wood or grassland provided small animals, nuts and tubers that were pre-roasted.
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    From 300,000 years ago, most of the different human species lived in small hunter-gatherer societies.
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    They had fire, wood and stone tools, planned for the future, buried their dead, and had cultures of their own.
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    But most importantly, they spoke to each other.
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    Probably in a kind of proto-language, less complex than ours.
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    If we had a time machine, how far would we be able to go back,
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    steal a few babies and raise them today without anyone noticing that they're a bit different?
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    There is much debate.
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    Anatomically, modern humans emerged 200,000 years ago,
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    but probably 70,000 years is as far as we could travel back and still snatch a behaviourally modern human.
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    Before that, the babies would probably lack a few crucial gene mutations
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    Necessary to build a brain with modern language and abstract thinking abilities.
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    At some point, around 50,000 years ago, there was an explosion in innovation.
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    Tools and weapons became more sophisticated and culture became more complex,
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    because at this point, humans had a multi-purpose brain,
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    and a more advanced language to communicate information with each other effectively,
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    and down to the last detail.
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    This allowed much closer cooperation, and is what really makes us different from any other creature on Earth.
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    Not our comparatively weak bodies and inferior senses,
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    but the ability to cooperate flexibly in large groups, unlike, for example, rigid beehives
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    or intimate, but tiny wolf packs.
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    As our brain evolved, we became able to do something, life had been unable to do up to this point.
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    One – expand knowledge quickly.
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    Two – preserve the knowledge gained over generations.
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    Three – build on past knowledge, to gain even deeper insight.
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    This seems daft, but until then, information had to be passed on from generation to generation,
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    mostly through genetics, which is not efficient.
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    Still, for the next 40,000 years, human life remained more or less the same.
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    There was little to build upon.
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    Our ancestors were only one animal among many.
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    Building a skyscraper without knowing what a house is… is hard.
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    But while it is easy to be arrogant in our attitude to our ancestors, this would be ignorant.
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    Humans 50,000 years ago were survival specialists.
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    They had a detailed mental map of their territory,
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    their senses were fine-tuned to the environment,
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    they knew and memorized a great amount of information about plants and animals.
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    They could make complicated tools that required years of careful training and very fine motor skills
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    Their bodies compared to our athletes today just because of their daily routines,
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    and they lived a rich social life within their tribe
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    Survival required so many skills that the average brain volume of early modern humans
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    might even have been bigger than it is today
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    As a group we know more today, but as individuals our ancestors were superior to us
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    But then around 12,000 years ago, in multiple locations, humans developed agriculture.
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    Everything changed very quickly.
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    Before, survival as a hunter and forager required superb physical and mental abilities in all fields from everybody
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    With the rise of the agricultural age, individuals could increasingly rely on the skills of others for survival.
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    This meant that some of them could specialize.
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    Maybe they worked on better tools, maybe they took time to breed more resistant crops or better livestock,
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    Maybe they started inventing things.
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    As farming got more and more efficient, what we call civilization began
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    Agriculture gave us a reliable and predictable food source,
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    which allowed humans to hoard food on a large scale for the first time,
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    which is much eaiser to do with grains than meat,
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    The food stock required protection, which led to communities living together in tighter spaces
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    First, early defense structures were built, the need for organization grew
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    The more organized we got, the faster things became efficient
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    Villages became cities, cities became kingdoms, kingdoms became empires
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    Connections between humans exploded which led to opportunities to exchange knowledge
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    Progress became exponential
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    About 500 years ago the Scientific Revolution began
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    Mathematics, Physics, Astronomy, Biology, and Chemistry transformed everything we thought we knew
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    The Industrial Revolution followed soon after laying the foundation for the modern world
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    As our overall efficiency gew exponentially,
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    more people could spend their lifetime contributing to the progress of humanity
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    Revolutions kept happening.
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    The invention of the computer, its evolution into a medium we all use on a daily basis,
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    and the rise of the Internet shaped our world
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    It's hard to grasp how fast all of that happened
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    It's been about 125,000 generations since the emergence of the first human species
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    About 7,500 generations since the physiologically modern humans saw the light of day
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    500 generations ago, what we call civilization began
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    20 generations ago, we learned how to do science
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    And the Internet became available to most people only one generation ago
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    Today we live in the most prosperous age humanity has ever experienced
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    We have transformed this planet, from the composition of its atmosphere to large-scale changes in its landscape
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    and also in terms of the other animals in existence.
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    We light up the night with artificial stars and put people in a metal box in the sky
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    Some have even walked on our Moon
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    We put robots on other planets
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    We've looked deep into the past of the universe with mechanical eyes
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    Our knowledge and our way of acquiring and storing more of it has exploded
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    The average high school student today knows more about the universe than a scholar a few centuries ago
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    Humans dominate this planet, even if our rule is very fragile
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    We are still not that different from our ancestors 70,000 years ago
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    But your lifestyle has existed for less than 0.001% of human history
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    From here on, there's no saying what the future holds for us
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    We're building a skyscraper, but we're not sure if it's standing on a solid foundation
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    or if we're building it on quicksand
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    Let's leave it with that for now
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    The next time you miss your train, your burger is not hot enough, or someone cuts in line
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    Remember how special this made-up human world is
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    Maybe it's not worth being upset about all those little things.
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    This video was supported by audible.com/nutshell
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    In the making of it, we used the book "Sapiens: a brief history of humankind" as one of the major sources.
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    If you want to get to it, or any other for free and support us, go to audible.com/nutshell and get a free 30-day trial
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    It's so hard to read books when you have the internet, so we can at least listen to them
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    In general, we listen to a lot of audiobooks while designing our videos,
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    so we can highly recommend audible
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    OK, so this was our first take on making a history-related video
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    we'd love to make much more of them, but they take even more time than our average video.
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    So we might do 3 or 4 a year.
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    Your feedback's very welcome here
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    Thank you so much for watching,
    and if you want to support us directly,
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    you can do so on Patreon.
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    It really helps us out.
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    While you think about it, here are more videos, if you need more distration.
Title:
What Happened Before History? Human Origins
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
10:06

English subtitles

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