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21 votes
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Why Runa Indigenous people find 'natural parenting' troubling
13 votes -
The expanding dark forest and generative AI
6 votes -
Is today a special day in your culture? Can you tell us about it?
The internet is a very diverse place but sometimes with the "default" north american skew, it may not seem like it. If your culture or people or faith group or spiritual practice is celebrating...
The internet is a very diverse place but sometimes with the "default" north american skew, it may not seem like it.
If your culture or people or faith group or spiritual practice is celebrating something today or soon, would you care to share?
Many of us used to have smaller groups on another site to celebrate things together or hold rememberances, and perhaps tildes being a together kind of community can celebrate and learn together instead of segregating into silos.
Some suggestions:
- today's date please
- what cultures and groups celebrate or commemorate this day or period?
- what is the celebration's origins and purpose?
- how does one celebrate?
- how has it changed over the years or stayed the same?
- is it reoccurring and on what calendar system?
Looking forward to learning more from other traditions and groups!
13 votes -
Warrior skeletons reveal Bronze Age Europeans couldn't drink milk
8 votes -
Navigating the ethics of ancient human DNA research
1 vote -
Scientists discovered the oldest known DNA and used it to reveal what life was like two million years ago in the northern tip of Greenland
4 votes -
Svante Pääbo deserves his accolade – palaeogenetics is an expanding field that tells us who we are
5 votes -
Swedish researcher Svante Pääbo has won this year's Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his research into how human beings evolved
12 votes -
Did Neanderthals make art?
5 votes -
Three things I got wrong about patriarchy
5 votes -
The polyglots of Dardistan - At the crossroads of south and central Asia lies one of the world’s most multilingual places, with songs and poetry to match
3 votes -
Book review: The Dawn Of Everything
2 votes -
You're not allowed in this cave. But there's a copy.
7 votes -
Three centuries on, a shaman's precious rune drum returns home – instrument confiscated by the Danes is given back to the Sámi
4 votes -
Mysticism’s function
4 votes -
How our ancestors used to sleep can help the sleep-deprived today
7 votes -
Promethean beasts - Far from being hardwired to flee fire, some animals use it to their own ends, helping us understand our own pyrocognition
8 votes -
Human history gets a rewrite
13 votes -
Mutiny on the sex raft: How a 70s science project descended into violent chaos
9 votes -
America's first pastime
6 votes -
Picture Book Lust - Vanishing Asia by Kevin Kelly
5 votes -
Dogs have been our best friends for at least 23,000 years
13 votes -
Five things worth knowing about empathy
4 votes -
The Skeleton Lake - Genetic analysis of human remains found in the Himalayas has raised baffling questions about who these people were and why they were there
11 votes -
Videos on anthropology?
A friend of mine asked me for good videos on anthropology. I'm at a complete loss. I have several good youtube channels for history, but finding anthropology-related content is surprisingly...
A friend of mine asked me for good videos on anthropology. I'm at a complete loss. I have several good youtube channels for history, but finding anthropology-related content is surprisingly difficult.
Any recommendations?
6 votes -
Why are we in the West so weird? A theory
6 votes -
David Graeber has died
16 votes -
Ancient bow-and-arrow technology dating back some 48,000 years has been discovered in a Sri Lankan cave, making it the oldest evidence of archery to be found in this part of the world
10 votes -
Africa’s biggest collection of ancient human footprints has been found
8 votes -
Is marriage over?
7 votes -
Why we buy weird things in times of crisis
10 votes -
'Ghost' DNA from unknown ancestors found in West Africans
9 votes -
The most popular songs today are sadder than they were fifty years ago: can cultural evolution explain this negative turn?
11 votes -
Correcting the historical bias against domestic materials
4 votes -
Can tattoos make you healthier?
3 votes -
Remembering the forgotten Chinese railroad workers
8 votes -
The missing link that wasn’t
3 votes -
How modern life is transforming the human skeleton
16 votes -
New investigations into the Tahitian Mourner’s costume
1 vote -
Coffee: The muslim drink
12 votes -
This genealogy database helped solve dozens of crimes. But its new privacy rules will restrict access by cops.
4 votes -
Tractor driver finds South Island's first moa footprints in Otago river
7 votes -
'It's amazing tatau's persisted': How Samoan tattooing withstood colonialism
6 votes -
New species of ancient human discovered in the Philippines
7 votes -
New species of ancient human discovered in Philippines cave
15 votes -
The hidden resilience of “food desert” neighborhoods
9 votes -
What does the word 'civilized' mean to you? Can it be used to compare and contrast societies and cultures?
Do you believe that some cultures/societies are more 'civilized' than others? What is your definition of 'civilized' / what does it mean to be 'civilized'? ~ If you've studied history and/or...
Do you believe that some cultures/societies are more 'civilized' than others? What is your definition of 'civilized' / what does it mean to be 'civilized'?
~
If you've studied history and/or anthropology then surely you've heard many uses of the term "savages" to describe groups of people that were considered to be less 'civilized' than whomever was writing that piece.
I was also just reading a book that described in detail some of the really horrible war crimes committed by both sides in the Sri Lankan civil war including but not limited to: raging mobs burning people alive, murder and rape of civilians, use of child soldiers, suicide bombers, etc. Please note that in no way am I considering the people of Sri Lanka as 'uncivilized', just using an example of what seems to be 'uncivilized' behavior.An initial thought that I had was "huh, I'm glad I don't currently live somewhere where I could be burned alive based on my ethnicity/religion/beliefs by a rage fueled mob of people", but then the history of the western world came to mind - some of those exact same thing happened less than 100 years ago to many non-white groups of people in America, including some things even worse (read: human slavery). From here came a flood of other thoughts poking holes in whatever my initial definition of 'civilized' was. Plenty of things in present-day United States could be considered uncivilized. Yet one could make an argument that a more 'civilized' civilization might be one that allows many personal freedoms.
So, I want to ask all of you what you think of the concept of being 'civilized'. Is it a colonialistic-type term used to promote a higher sense of placement in the world that should be abolished. Does it have any merit in its use? If so, what do you think makes a civilized group of people and does one exist?
16 votes -
When we first made tools
9 votes -
Big gods came after the rise of civilisations, not before, finds study using huge historical database
15 votes