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Unbound

How Eight Technologies Made Us Human, Transformed Society, and Brought Our World to the Brink

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Unbound

Auteur(s): Richard L. Currier
Narrateur(s): Noah Michael Levine
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Although we usually think of technology as something unique to modern times, our ancestors began to create the first technologies millions of years ago in the form of prehistoric tools and weapons. Over time, eight key technologies gradually freed us from the limitations of our animal origins.

The fabrication of weapons, the mastery of fire, and the technologies of clothing and shelter radically restructured the human body, enabling us to walk upright, shed our body hair, and migrate out of tropical Africa. Symbolic communication transformed human evolution from a slow biological process into a fast cultural process. The invention of agriculture revolutionized the relationship between humanity and the environment, and the technologies of interaction led to the birth of civilization. Precision machinery spawned the industrial revolution and the rise of nation-states; and in the next metamorphosis, digital technologies may well unite all of humanity for the benefit of future generations.

Synthesizing the findings of primatology, paleontology, archeology, history, and anthropology, Richard Currier reinterprets and retells the modern narrative of human evolution that began with the discovery of Lucy and other Australopithecus fossils. But the same forces that allowed us to integrate technology into every aspect of our daily lives have also brought us to the brink of planetary catastrophe. Unbound explains both how we got here and how human society must be transformed again to achieve a sustainable future.

Technology: "The deliberate modification of any natural object or substance with forethought to achieve a specific end or to serve a specific purpose."

©2015 Richard L. Currier (P)2015 Audible, Inc.
Ancienne Anthropologie Histoire et culture Science Sciences de la Terre Sciences sociales Technologie Paléontologie Histoire naturelle Afrique
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This book is great until the discussion about the relationship of property of agricultural societies to the oppression of women and children. The author seems to blend speculation about ancient hunter/gatherer societies with modern studies of the same. How he can possibly discuss what was happening 100,000 of years ago and relate those ideas to modern studies is illogical. To make blanket statements that women are oppressed because men dominate them for property reasons makes the author a good Marxist, but how does he explain Eastern North American Iroquois Matriarchical society and Algonkian Patriarchal society, when the first was agricultural and the second, hunter-gatherers? I expect a scientist to be much more careful about bold statements about women's lives and history. I note he doesn't mention Margaret Mead as a source of sexuality. Her two month sashay into Pacific culture has been discredited for the same bold, uninformed, pretentious quasi-science of sexuality, that is obvious in Currier's writing. Come on! Writing about sexuality without a grounding in awareness of sexism in science is, well, Neandertal (German spelling) in intelligence....

Women's Sexuality a Threat?

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