From: http://www.context.org/ICLIB/IC06/Gilman4.htm

 

Excerpted from How We Got Here

A brief history of Education

by Robert Gilman

 

Excerpted from How We Got Here

A brief history of Education

by Robert Gilman

Education in traditional non-literate cultures was remarkably in tune with whole brain learning (which perhaps should not surprise us given the long successful lives of most of these cultures). Children learned by watching and imitating, with lots of immersion in the adult world they would grow into. Specialized training, to the extent that it existed, was either through apprenticeship or in special initiation schools, both of which used experience and drama as well as direct instruction. I don't want to romanticize, for there were definite limitations in terms of a lack of creativity and occasional harshness of methods, but in general these societies managed to pass on complex cultures from generation to generation in largely informal ways that were both efficient and effective...

 

Excerpted from CONSCIOUSNESS  AND  CULTURAL  DIVERSITY

Mario Kamenetzky

http://www.geocities.com/complexidade/marioke.html

Jean Gebser (1905-1973) in his fundamental work on the structures of consciousness (1) describes their evolution since the first humanoids started differentiating themselves from the apes. The conscious operator of the first hominids was very small, but enough to perceive the environment in which they were moving, the here and now of life. The structure of this archaic consciousness had also a   small subconscious where people registered some of their experiences. Those records would make them remind for instance that a tiger is bad, because when it attacks people, they fill pain and their horde may leave them behind as it moves on. Certain berries would instead be recognized as tasteful and enjoyable.

At that initial period in our evolution, there was nobody to write codes of belief and behavior in those budding hard disks of human consciousness. There were no cultures, hence there were no enculturation processes.

The most important part of that archaic consciousness was the unconscious. From it, nature, a cosmic consciousness, a universal spirit, or God, whichever representation is more acceptable for a present day individual, was guiding behavior. There was an threats. There was an unconscious motivation to rub, kiss, caress, and penetrate other bodies without nothing to qualify a particular action as right or wrong, good or bad, rewardable or punishable. Hominids communicated among themselves through body language with its visible mechanics and its invisible chemistry.

It is when the first tribal societies emerged that we entered the second generation of consciousness structures. It lasted for some hundred thousand years. During this second evolutionary period the hard disk's capacity of our subconscious kept growing and our ability to know about nature and use it kept developing. From within each tribal culture a particular language unfolded. Using it, each culture organized its own enculturation process to adapt the newborns to a particular set of beliefs and behaviors.

It was the beginning of a multicultural world, and since then the relation between different cultures has been inspired by either amour   propre or amour de soi. Amour propre is the love of oneself for what one has; amour de soi is the love of oneself for what one is (2). The enculturation process of most tribal societies aimed at developing amour propre; only a few preferred to cultivate amour de soi (3). Amour de soi usually inspires attitudes such as those described in present day language in plate I. Similarly, attitudes usually inspired by amour propre are stereotyped in plate II. When amour propre prevails, cultural diversity instead of being a source of joy becomes a source of conflict.

The trend towards structuring consciousness under patterns of amour propre rather than amour de soi increased when the tribal societies gave way to the mythical societies that learned how to produce food, their people ceasing to depend only on hunting and gathering. Enculturation into amour propre was further reinforced when rational structures of consciousness started to build on the mythical.

Plate I Behavior inspired by amour de soi

ATTITUDE

STEREOTYPICAL DESCRIPTION

Partnership with nature

Nature is my source of food for nurturing my body, and of beauty for making happy my mind. It also inspires me to reflect on my relationship with the creative spirit that animates the whole universe. I am a co-creator in the continuos evolution of the creation on planet Earth, a planet whose physical environment I should try to preserve and improve for the benefit of generations to come.

Send of history

I am also a co-creator in the evolution of human society. Having created the concepts of social justice and personal freedom, I will constantly try to improve and expand their application.

Deep spirituality

The universal creative spirit talks to me through my whole body, from beyond and within it. As a co-creator decision that only affect myself are to be decided only in dialog with this omnipresent partner. Although I may reveal my spiritual dialog to others and discuss with them my decisions, the latter are of my own responsibility only.

Moments of surrender

I should ready myself to always surrender to love and life, including the final peaceful surrender to death, but being master of my own health up to the last minute.

Body Acceptance

I feel comfortable with all parts of my body and I try to perfect them.

Enjoyment of life

I do not accumulate material creations of the human mind. I use them to increase my enjoyment of life over what nature itself can offer. I reject accumulation and oversophistication because they muddle rather than enhance enjoyment.

Love harnessing

I am not ashamed of the polymorphic sexual vulgaries that still emerge from the archaic structures of my ever-present origin as creature of nature. Through romance, eroticism, and playfulness, I try to soften their rough edges and keep a healthy and happy relationship with my partners. Households organized along these behavioral patterns provide the basic blocks on which to build equally healthy and happy societies.

Plate II — Behavior inspired by amour propre

ATTITUDE

STEREOTYPICAL DESCRIPTION

Body Shame

I should neither let others see my body nor allow them to show theirs. I have no control on the design of my body and will not allow others to compete with theirs.

Either / Or and divisiveness

Who does not share my ideas and feelings, my perception of the world, is against me. My race, my religion, my culture are superior to all others.

Parade of riches

My kid's achievements, my partner's beauty, my car, my house, and all other possessions are part of myself and my position in the world.

Power control

I dominate all others around me: family members, shareholders, workers, partners, suppliers and consumers when I own an enterprise; colleagues if I am a professional, a politician, or an artist. When money and persuasion are not enough, force will assure this domination. The world is divided between submissive masses and eager masters.

Control over nature

Nature should be exploited by humans even if some of it is destroyed.

No sense of history

After me the deluge

Spirituality as another power-based relationship

God is the only "being" more powerful than myself, but he is my ally.

Moments of surrender

I surrender only when sick (come doctor, fix me up) or in legal trouble (come lawyer, bail me out)

Love as still another power-based relationship

In love games there are also winners and losers.

   

 

Excerpted from "Taking ADvantage"  

Richard F. Taflinger

http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~taflinge/advant.html

 

This chapter examines human cultural evolution. Although biological and social evolution have been a strong influence on human responses to evolution, biology and being social is basic to all humans. However, biology and society are not the only influence on people: there is also the influence of culture, the rules of a certain group of people and how they are to respond to biological and social stimuli.

Self-preservation, reproduction and greed are biological imperatives. They arose from millions and billions of years of biological evolution. They are as much a part of human life as any other life on earth.

However, humans are not just biological creatures. We are also social creatures, the most social on earth. The ways we deal with each other, from personal to international relationships, can have as much an influence on our behavior as our instinctive reactions. But our societies and cultures did not spring like Athena, full-grown, from the forehead of Zeus. They grew and developed during millions of years of cultural evolution. And the closer our primate ancestors approached being human, the less biological evolution influenced our behavior, and the more cultural evolution took over.

This does not mean that biological evolution ended. On the contrary, it remained as important as ever. It simply altered direction. The emerging human body evolved to fit its ecological niche, to survive as a living creature. The emerging human mind now evolved to fit its cultural niche, to survive as a social creature. (Leakey, 1978)

We can never know for certain about our primate predecessors' cultural evolution. Unlike bone and stone, culture doesn't fossilize. Nevertheless, it is possible to make educated guesses.

We can start with some assumptions:

1) Humans are biological creatures. We have all the characteristics of biological creatures, such as genes, chromosomes, DNA and RNA, cellular structure, etc..

2) We are as sensitive to our environment as any other organism. When presented with environmental problems such as lack of air, food or water, we die, just like other organisms.

3) We evolve as an adaptation to the environment, just like any other living organism. The archeological record shows alterations in human structure and behavior (although often the last is an educated guess) as the environment, according to geological evidence, changed.

4) Our primate ancestors behaved similarly to today's primates. Genes guide how a body develops; bodies develop to cope with the conditions in its environmental niche; we are 99.6% genetically like chimpanzees. (Sagan, 1992) It is reasonable to assume we, at one time, lived lives similar to chimpanzees'. As Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan say in Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors, "If we want to understand ourselves by examining other beings, chimps are a good place to start."

The first three assumptions require little discussion, since they are self-evident. It is the last that is important to an examination of human cultural evolution, how humans became human, how we evolved from an early ape into ourselves.

Chimpanzees live a comparatively relaxed life: they sleep, play, form social bonds, forage for plant foods augmented by the occasionally hunted meat. It is the latter, the difference in how chimps and protohumans gathered food, that caused a great break between them. (Leakey, 1978)

Chimps (and other apes) eat plant foods when and where they find them. They don't gather them or share them -- each ape feeds rherself.

However, when meat is available, it becomes the center of attention. The other chimps gather around, "asking" for a share. Whichever chimp brings it in shares it however rhe wishes. It is probable that protohumans did the same thing with meat.

It is how protohumans handled plant foods that differs from other apes. Instead of an individual foraging for rherself and eating what rhe finds on the spot, protohumans began gathering the food and bringing it back to a central area. Here they shared it among the other members of the band.Why would protohumans change the way they handled food from what is obviously a perfectly acceptable method for chimpanzees? The answer probably lies in the environment in which the protohumans found themselves. Chimpanzees inhabit tropical-zone forests where plant food is near at hand. It's so near they need merely stretch out and grab it. The search or food is more for favorites than for needs. Chimps live in an environment where resources are relatively abundant.

Protohumans changed their way of dealing with food. Since they did so, it must have been in adaptation to their environment to improve their ability to survive. The most logical reason for a change in the pattern of "eat what comes to hand" would be a lack of food that came to hand. That is, the protohuman must have evolved in a marginal environment, one in which food was scarce or difficult to gather. This led to a basic change in the relationships between the members and the social life of the band. (Leakey, 1978)

COOPERATION

For the first time (as far as we know) apes began working together to gather food. This was probably an adjustment to the band living in these marginal conditions. Where resources are abundant, there is no need for cooperation. An individual can get what she needs on her own. In marginal conditions, a cooperative group can do a better job than individuals in exploiting what resources there are.

A division of labor also arose in that gathering of food. The males gathered the meat supply. At first they were probably scavengers, finding animals that had died or predators had killed, since they were too small, weak and harmless(2) to have much success as hunters. However, as cultural evolution continued, cooperation overcame those limitations, leading to a greater hunting ability, much as chimpanzees do today.(3)

While the males went in search of meat, the females foraged for the plant foods. This division of labor made sense because of the biological need to reproduce and the obligations imposed by that need. The females, being the ones with the biologically dictated responsibility of bearing and rearing the young, were probably often burdened with them. Thus, females would find hunting difficult, since it undoubtedly involved traveling long distances and maintaining silence on a stalk, both hard to achieve with an infant along.

In addition, there are dangers on a hunt, particularly for a small primate that can change from predator to prey in an instant. The female is biologically more valuable than the male: she bears and rears the young, and has a much greater stake in reproduction than the male (see Chapter Three). Biologically, the male's only purpose is to aid the female in reproducing. (Gould, 1983) He can't do that without her (although she can -- some species can reproduce parthenogenically (i.e., without the need for a male to fertilize the eggs)). Thus, the death of a female is a greater blow to a species' survival than the death of even many males. It makes little genetic sense to place so valuable a member of a species in harm's way.

However, there is little of hunting's dangers in foraging for plants -- it's hard to imagine being pummeled to death by a rampaging cucumber. Thus, it is sensible for the females in the band to do this job, while the males do the hunting.

The division of labor allowed the group to better exploit its niche (see Chapter Three for a discussion of the niche). When each animal is foraging only for itself, it must personally find all its needs. In an environment where this isn't possible, some animals will find enough and others will fail (read, die). However, dividing the labor in such marginal conditions allows each animal to gather what it can, rather than what it needs. If it falls short of what it personally needs, it gets the rest from the surplus others have found. Thus, males that fail in their hunt can still eat what the females have gathered. When the males succeed, all gain from the concentrated nourishment that meat provides,(4) and can save the plant food for more lean times.

The division of labor led to two things. The first was the camp. Most apes are constantly on the move, following the food supply, foraging as they go. Wherever evening overtakes them, they stop for the night. With abundant resources, there is no need to scavenge everything in an area to survive: the band need merely follow the line of least resistance or most resources.

However, sharing food requires a central place to which the animals can return to do the sharing. Such a place, a camp, serves two purposes. First, it is a convenient place where all the members of the band know the others will eventually be, particularly the males who may be gone for hours or even days on their hunts. This also makes it easier to share the food found.

Second, it allows the band to better exploit its range. The members of the band can radiate out from the camp in different directions every day, eventually covering the entire area. When, after a few days, the band has exhausted the area, they can move on and find a new camp.

The third effect of the division of labor was each gender depending on the other for survival. Although the females could have lived exclusively on vegetation (as vegetarians do today), the greater concentration of nutrition in meat would benefit both the females and their young.

The males, of course, probably couldn't survive on an exclusively meat diet. Many primates are omnivorous, and depend on plant foods for vitamins and minerals that meat alone doesn't provide. Although the males could have gathered plant foods to fill their nutritional needs, this would have lessened the effectiveness of the group in exploiting their niche. In addition, hunting and scavenging are not always successful. Thus, the males depended on what the females gathered, while the females and their young benefitted from what the males gathered, leading to a much closer relationship between all members of the group.

The two effects of dividing food-gathering labor, the camp and the dependence of the sexes on each other beyond reproduction, were the first great steps toward modern human culture.

Sharing of resources and its concomitant division of labor led to a divergence in both the biological and cultural evolution of the sexes. Evidence shows that women are more group-oriented in their activities than men, while men are more individualistic; that women's senses are generally sharper than men's; that women are more language oriented than men, while men are more spatially oriented; that women are better able to "read" faces for emotion than men. (Moir, 1989; Tannen, 1991) Each of these differences arises from how the brain works, both in perception and response to that perception. Several aspects of protohuman social life based on cooperative food gathering could well have contributed to these biological differences between how each gender's brain functions.

FEMALES

Biological pressures would alter the females' lifestyles under the new system of food sharing. These changes would include becoming more sedentary, developing a group mentality, improving their senses, and making them the major influence on socializing the young. The last is a primary difference between humans and most other creatures on earth.

First, the females bearing and rearing the young would have bound them to a fairly sedentary lifestyle and made gathering plant foods their contribution. There is no need to pursue a running rice stalk or dodging carrot -- plants tend to stand still. And carrying a child would make any such pursuit difficult if not impossible, anyway. Their obligation to rear and care for the relatively immobile young would also contribute to staying sedentary.

Second, the females would likely have stayed together in a group for several reasons. Plant foods are often small: they would have to gather many individual nuts or roots or cereal grains to provide nourishment, unlike meat that comes in comparatively large and easily transported packages. As the adage says, "Many hands make light work."

Also, a group is more efficient than an individual in searching an area; many eyes can see more signs of edible vegetation than a single pair. A group mentality would be an advantage in exploiting a marginal environment.

In addition, there is safety in numbers. Predators are less likely to go undetected when there are many eyes, ears and noses at work. And even if a predator attacks, the confusion several running, screeching animals can cause could lessen its chances of success.(5)

Finally, a group of females is more efficient in rearing young. They can help each other, act as babysitters for each other, share in the training. As mentioned above, the latter becomes more and more important as an animal increases in intelligence and social life.

The greater an animal's intelligence and the more complex its social life, the more likely much of its behavior is learned rather than instinctive. This in turn requires a period of training in the use of that intelligence and how to function in that society. Such training would take place during an animal's childhood.

A human needs more training than any other creature. That this is true is clear from the differing lengths of childhood of various animals.(6) Most fish and reptiles are born ready to survive on their own. They need little if any training from their elders. Mice are ready in days, cats and dogs in weeks, lions and wolves in months. However, chimps, with a complex lifestyle and social life, require two to three years. Humans need 12 to 14 years for their basic training, and an additional seven or more for advanced training, the longest childhood on Earth. Protohumans probably fell somewhere between chimps and humans. And since the females bore and raised the young, at least the basic training fell to them.(7)

These factors may have contributed to the differing evolution of the male and female brain. As stated above, women's senses are sharper than men's. Women can distinguish colors better, have sharper hearing, have a better sense of smell. In fact, they can see, hear and smell things that men are incapable of detecting at all. (Moir, 1989)

The evolution of such abilities makes sense when placed in the context of the female protohuman's gathering of resources. The sharper sight would make finding food easier. Gathering plant foods requires seeing a tiny leaf or shoot and identifying it as edible by its shape and color. The better the sense of sight, the faster and more efficient the gatherer can be. The sharpening of the sense of smell would help her in locating plants. It would also help her discriminate between those that might look very similar but have different properties, like poisonous or medicinal effects. Better senses of hearing and smell would aid in evading predators.

In addition, women's greater facility with language and ability to read facial expressions could have come from the combination of working in close-knit groups and rearing children. As protohuman society gained complexity working toward true humanity, the learned behaviors became more and more complex and hard to teach just through example and gestures.

Many animals use vocal noises that carry meaning, such as warnings or courtship rituals. Some even make sounds that carry more specific meanings. For example, the colobus monkey makes a hawk warning versus a snake warning, separate sounds that cause different reactions from the troop. The former makes them dive down through the trees and into deeper foliage, the latter sends them scampering into the high branches. (Attenborough, 1991)

It isn't much of a stretch to extend the making of warning sounds to the making of sounds that carry other, more complex meanings. Of course, this requires three adaptations to occur: a vocal apparatus capable of making complex sounds; a brain capable of controlling the muscles of such an apparatus; and brains capable of abstraction to give random noises meaning to the members of the group.

The last is not so hard to imagine. Research has shown that chimpanzees can think in abstractions. For example, Lucy, a chimp at the University of Oklahoma Institute of Primate Studies who has learned sign language, calls a watermelon drink fruit, ducks water birds, and invented the name rock berry for the Brazil nut. (Leakey, 1978)

It is the first two, the complex vocal apparatus and a brain capable of controlling it, that appear the special province of humans. In fact, a way in which anthropologists classify fossil skulls as human or primate is the shape of the skull base to leave room for such an apparatus. As protohumans evolved into humans, their larynxes and skulls altered to allow them to increase the variety and intricacy of the sounds they could produce. (Willumsen, 1992) There would be little reason for such a change to evolve unless it provided an advantage in surviving. In fact, the advantage had to be considerable, since the change brought with it an increased chance for its possessor to die. The altered larynx meant rhe could no longer swallow and breathe simultaneously, possible before the change. Rhe could easily choke.(8)

The only purpose for such a change is to facilitate an intricate modulation of sound -- in other words, to speak. The purpose of speaking is to permit communication of concrete and abstract ideas. For communication to be more valuable than the ability to avoid choking to death, then the message communicated must provide a greater survival value. Obviously, the training in the intricacies of human survival, which require so much time, is best provided by speech. And since physical survival, the training in finding food and water and avoiding predators, is better taught by instinct, example and practice, it must be the intricacies of survival in human society that speech teaches and carries out.

Getting back to why women are better with language with men. It's clear that, with female protohumans providing the children with their basic training, it would be the female that would first evolve the ability to speak, and need to. The complex social life would evolve along with it because of the females' group mentality, which carried so many survival advantages for them and their offspring. Thus, the complex social life led to complex thought, which led to complex communication, which complicated the social life, requiring more complex thought, which need complex communication skills.

Her ability to recognize subtle emotional shifts in others' faces would also arise from her bearing and rearing the young. She would be with her infant from birth and always pay close attention to it, often just looking at its face as it rested in her arms. Since it would be unable to speak, she would have to deduce its feelings and thoughts from its expressions. The finer her ability to discriminate one expression from another, the better she would be at determining its needs and caring for it.

MALES

What about the males? It appears that the females evolved speech, society, cooperation, bigger and more efficient brains, and just about everything else that makes humans human, and that the males just tagged along. Well, in a way that's true. Nature alters animals through evolution to suit them better to their environments. Most of the changes discussed above were to improve the female's and her young's suitability, since they and not the male were most important to the continuation of the species. Of course, the male had to evolve, too. If he didn't, the species would have died out.

However, his evolution did not parallel hers since his role in the evolving human culture was different. He had to evolve the ability to speak and comprehend speech, or he couldn't have understood his training to fit his role in the society. However, he didn't need speech in his role as a hunter. Signs are as efficient as speech in organizing the hunt, and less likely to ruin a stalk by alerting the prey.

Unlike the female, the protohuman male was probably much like the present-day chimpanzee about fatherhood. That is, not much of a consideration. At least, not at first. He might take an avuncular interest, or provide protection. However, unequipped to feed it, his interaction with an infant wouldn't have the strong biological attachment that its mother would have.

Later, as the child grew, he would take a greater interest if it was male. It would his job to train the child in his function in the society -- to be a hunter. However, this would again probably not be a fatherly interest, but a mentor's.

The male would have had an active, rather than sedentary lifestyle. His duty to the group is hunter dictates this. Hunting, in a gatherer-hunter society, consists of tramping over large areas looking for signs of game. Once he finds game, he must stalk and kill it. The latter can often mean a lot of running. Males would be active, the more active the more efficient as hunters.

He wouldn't develop a group mentality. Instead, being independent would be a more valuable characteristic. Hunters are more successful when they work together. They can go after and kill faster, larger animals than an individual hunter can. This would be especially true for the protohumans, who had little in the way of weapons beyond rocks and clubs (once they figured out how to use them). However, such a hunt is a cooperative effort between independently acting agents, each participant acting alone and responding to conditions he personally sees and can control. An analogy would be a football game. The coach sends the play in. Each player has the same end in mind: offense wants to gain yardage, defense wants to prevent that. However, once the play starts, it's every man for himself, moving and reacting in the way he thinks will best carry out his team's objective; no one gives orders. They don't even consider the idea of everyone doing the same thing -- it wouldn't work.(9)

He would also evolve senses that operated differently from women's. He didn't need such acute hearing or smell, fine color discrimination, an ability to detect subtle nuances in expressions, since none of these were necessary for hunting. What he would evolve are a better sense of spatial relationships, geometry, ballistics, and an ability to concentrate his attention on the task at hand to the exclusion of distractions.

The first two, a fine sense of spatial relationships and geometry, are necessary for efficient hunting. A good hunter can make fine discriminations in distance and angle, since his prey and his approach to it constantly change both.

The last three, ballistics, touch and manual dexterity, are a result of the gradual evolution of the protohuman male to the human man. One of the attributes of humanity is the ability to make and use tools. Many animals use tools: the chimp makes a tool to probe termite hills and draw them out, and uses a rock and anvil (another rock or a branch) to crack open nuts; some birds crack open snails and shellfish by either throwing them at rocks, or rocks at them. (Attenborough, 1991)

However, humans are better at making and using tools than any other creature on earth. One reason is people's fine sense of touch and ability to do fine manipulation of things with their hands. As humans evolved, so did their tools. Early tools were probably more accidental than intentional -- a pebble or stick that happened to be there; a rock that broke, making a sharp edge that the user found effective; a bone that, when broken, became pointed. In any case, they probably used and then discarded such tools on the spot. (Leakey, 1978)

Eventually, though, some bright protohuman realized that it was a good idea to hang onto such useful items. Instead of dropping them, rhe took them along. However, everything wears out. Finally, someone saw how accident shaped the stones or bones or antlers, and tried to do it rherself. After a few, or few thousand, attempts rhe succeeded. Refinements followed.

Real refinement in making stone and bone tools requires a delicacy of touch and manipulation. Banging two rocks together will make a serviceable edge. But to make a truly useful tool requires many small blows to create flakes, chip a fine, straight edge, adapt a flint knife to a scraper or awl or spear point. Without fine control over rher hands, a toolmaker is more likely, through clumsiness, to destroy than create such tools.

It is possible that the male manipulative abilities and single-minded concentration arose because his ancestors made fine tools and weapons. Although it's true that female protohumans were as likely to make tools as her male counterparts, the tools she made didn't need the same precision and quality: a pointed stick will dig up a root; a crude stone flake will work as a hide scraper or ax. Thus, she had less pressure on her to develop manual and concentration skills.

However, there is a difference in magnitude between a rock and a sharp-edged, well-balanced spearpoint when hunting. The better a male's skills, the higher the quality of his tools and weapons, and his consequent success as a hunter. The pressure on him to develop manual dexterity was strong. In addition, to insure doing what he wanted in making a tool, he had to concentrate on what he was doing: a moment's distraction might result in an imprecise blow to a flint spearpoint, ruining all the careful previous shaping.

Finally, a good sense of ballistics would evolve in the males as they developed their hunting techniques to include throwing rocks, spears, and eventually using bows and arrows. It was no longer a matter of instantly analyzing angles and distances to cut off a running animal rather than just following in its tracks. It was now necessary to take account of angle, distance, speed, gravity and personal strength to determine where a moving target and a thrown object would intersect. Such an ability would insure hitting the animal more often, improving the success of the hunt, leading to an evolutionary pressure to improve such an ability.

#

The above are some possible biological effects of the protohumans' change in how they gathered and shared food. However, humans are not only biological, but social creatures. At this point I would like to explore some of the effects on social relationships that arose from the camp and the mutual dependence of the sexes.

THE CAMP

The camp was not just a specified location in an area found by chance or by dusk to which all members of the band could return to share food. Eventually, the protohumans began searching for optimal locations, those that would provide the best conditions. These conditions would include being central to resources for more efficient exploitation, and necessities such as water and shelter close at hand.

The effects of having a conscious knowledge of the desirability of a location, necessary to be able to select one, could be far-reaching. First, whoever found it first would want to hang onto it -- possessiveness.

Second, whoever found it would realize its desirability and expect others who came along to recognize that desirability. This would lead to distrusting the motives of strangers -- xenophobia.

Third, the more desirable a location, the more the group would want to protect it to extend their stay. This would lead the group to manage their resources so they would last longer, rather than simply taking all they could find and moving on. This would give the land a relative value of its own, a feeling of "home."(10) That value would remain even when the resources grew scarce. Eventually, this would lead to a concept of cyclical time (seasons, the calendar, regular periods of abundance and scarcity), astronomy and astrology, animal husbandry, agriculture, territoriality, politics, economics, law, and religion, all those things that separate humans from all other creatures on earth.

All of this because our long-past ancestors needed someplace to share food? Yes, because this fundamental change in animal behavior evolved to maximize their survival and continued to do so. Let's take just one example, the concept of time. No matter how optimal a location, it changes as time passes. Most animals move on when conditions deteriorate. On the other hand, our ancestors learned that moving on was not always necessary -- it was possible to stay in one location because conditions changed on a fairly regular basis, from good to poor and back again.

However, to decide to stay requires an ability to predict what might happen, not in the next few minutes or even hours, but weeks and months. This requires a sense of time as a distinct and measurable entity, not merely an eternal "now".

The first measurement, the one that virtually all animals know, is the day. There is little more obvious in the world than the sun and its cycle of night and day. A second is the seasons, during which conditions change and trigger responses in plants and animals. Most of these responses are genetic or instinctive, such as migration or hibernation. There is little or no planning involved in these responses -- they are simply reactions to changing conditions.

Early humans began to notice a third, more subtle cycle, the waxing and waning of the moon; they could begin to measure months. They also began to relate the moon cycles to the cycles of the seasons, and thus of ecological conditions. By counting months, they could predict when seasons would change, and thus prepare for conditions before they changed.

However, the conditions were not immutable. That is, just because things happened the same for years doesn't mean they will happen just that way this year. Humans may have noticed that animals would migrate along a certain route beginning in the second full moon after the longest day of the year -- only this year the animals didn't show up. What went wrong? Perhaps disease wiped them out; perhaps they took a different route because the terrain changed; perhaps an asteroid hit them. How would the humans know? But if you have the imagination to see the relationship between a changing light in the sky and the turn of the seasons, you have the imagination to try to find explanations for things that do or do not happen. Such explanations, of course, will be based on your own experience. Since you have control over some things in your life, it isn't such a stretch to imagine that someone has control over the animals. Such a being would be a deity. The camp leads to a sense of home to a sense of time to a sense of religion.

This, of course, took place over millennia as humanity underwent cultural evolution. The other facets of human life, from agriculture to politics to law, evolved along with a sense of time and religion.

DEPENDENCE OF EACH GENDER ON THE OTHER

The sharing of food not only led to the camp, but the dependence of each gender on the other for survival. Such a dependence created new relationships between all the members of a band, males and females, adults and young.

The greatest change was for the adult males. To understand this, let's look at the females' life.(11) The females' life revolved around the members of the camp, in particular the young, with which they were often burdened. They gathered food in groups, ate it in groups, cared for the young in groups, groomed and played in groups. They, of course, were in charge of the young's early training in all aspects of life, from food gathering to social interaction. And, as the protohumans evolved closer and closer to true humanity, the training became more and more extensive. Nonetheless, the females' life was probably much the same as other primates'.

However, the males' life changed drastically. Rather than being virtually independent of all relationships other than competition with other males for status or breeding rights, he now became dependent on other members of the band. As hunting (as opposed to scavenging) became a more important and complex activity, cooperation rather than competition between the males was necessary to improve the success rate. Naturally, competition continued, but it was more ritualized and social: less breast-beating and physical intimidation to establish status and breeding rights.

The males' relationships with the females also altered drastically. Among most primates most interactions seem, for the males, to be designed to gain her permission for breeding. Among baboons, a male may act as a babysitter for a youngster, but it seems to improve his chances of being the mother's next consort: his solicitude has an ulterior motive. Observers have seen low status male chimps grooming an estrus female, then, when no high status males are watching, beckoning the female to join him in a secluded spot, his intentions obvious.

However, with the protohuman males getting much of their food from the efforts and good graces of the females, their interactions changed. Now she was more than a vessel for his genes, to be filled and forgotten; she was necessary for his personal, not just genetic, survival. Thus, his interest in her and her welfare went beyond that of a purely sexual one.

Her interest in him also extended. As the childhood of her young lengthened to have the time to learn everything it needed to know, her need to train and care for it increased as well. To do a good job, she not only had to devote more time and care to each child, she could have fewer. This made each child more valuable. And the meat the males brought in and shared with her and her child improved the child's chance of surviving and thriving. In addition, her male children needed training that she couldn't provide: inter-male relationships and the specialized skills of the hunt. Thus, it behooved her to form a closer relationship with the males (or at least, the meat they brought in).

Obviously, this closer relationship between males and females took time to develop. Archeological digs of some very early camps of protohumans that had learned to use fire show distinct separation: one large central hearth and another off to one side. From the artifacts such as tools, stone chips and bones around these hearths, many scientists opine that the larger hearth was for the females and young, while the smaller was for the males. Thus, instead of a single integrated society, there was still a social separation between the males and females.

However, later (in time) sites show a greater integration of the members of the bands, with less distinction of the hearths. It appears that both sexes gathered around all the hearths. Clearly, the social relationship between the sexes had grown closer.

Several new facets of primate life resulted from this change in each gender's dependence on the other. The first was the appearance of the nuclear family: a female, a male, and their children. Of course, the basic family was the female and her young. However, it would be more efficient for her to have a specific male to provide the meat and give her male children the training they needed. In this way, she could be certain of both.

Theories abound about the emergence of the nuclear family, its assumption of a monogamous relationship between the male and female, and its effect on human society, especially since it is contrary to the social life of virtually every primate (and most other species) on earth. Desmond Morris (THE NAKED APE) calls it the pair bond, and bases it on the female making sex sexier by developing breasts, buttocks and earlobes, and staying sexually receptive at all times. Because of this "sexiness", the male stays interested in her, and stays with her. I don't believe this is the case (see Chapter Three for a discussion). If one female developed these characteristics to attract and hold a male, so did the other females. Any female could satisfy the male's promiscuous nature, since they're all just as "sexy". No, there must have been more than just sex to hold together a nuclear family.

I believe it developed because of the mutual dependence of each gender on the other, and the complex social life that arose because of the camp. First, the male depended on the females for his plant food. It would be better for him to have a specific female to approach for it to guarantee getting some. In return, he would bring small game to her.(12) Thus, both would benefit from an individual rather than a group relationship.

Of course, it could be argued that there is no need to bring sex into such a relationship. They could just be friends. However, that would assume that the male (remember, he's still not a fully civilized human) removes sex from a relationship with a female, which would have been unlikely.(13  Such a relationship would have a sexual element. Thus, the facets involved in sexual attraction and selection would enter the formation of a nuclear family (see Chapters Three and Four for a discussion of sexual attraction and selection). Her criteria for a mate would include his being an excellent hunter, since the better he was as a hunter, the better she and her young would eat. His status in the society would also contribute to his desirability as a mate. Such status would probably be based on his ability as a hunter: planning, tracking, commanding, killing. This would probably gain him a greater share of any large game, and, as his mate, she and her young would benefit.(14)

Another major change of each gender's dependence on the other would grow from the development of the nuclear family. That change would be the growth of paternal interest in the young. In most primates, the males' interest in the young is non-specific and transient. That is, any youngster is interesting -- for a while. A male would play with it, or tolerate its attentions, until it grew tired of it (unless, of course, there's an ulterior motive as mentioned above). Then, he would walk away or hand it to its mother with an "It's yours -- do something with it" attitude. With the typical primate system of reproduction, promiscuity for both males and females, paternity is more a guess than a certainty. The closest a male can come to knowing whether any particular youngster is his is to be the only, or the last, mate a female has, and even then he's far from sure. Thus, the male neither knows nor cares whether the youngster is his, and thus has no paternal feelings for it.

With the growth of the nuclear family, it became possible for knowledge of paternity to arise. She has selected him as her mate, and he has exclusive breeding rights. Thus, any young produced during their relationship are probably his, and he begins to take a more than cursory interest in them. This would be particularly important as the society grows more intricate and the training of the young becomes more complex. The male's need to contribute would increase, especially for the male children. He would have to teach the boys the ins and outs of male competition and cooperation, and the skills needed for hunting and gaining status. He would also take an interest in the girls. He would want to match them with the best possible mates to improve not only his genetic heritage but his status. The former was probably an unconscious urge, but the latter would be a conscious linking of his line with another that had prestige. The more desirable his daughters, the better a match he could hope for.

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Of course, these two major changes in protohuman life, the camp and mutual dependence of the sexes, have created problems since they run counter to many aspects of biological life that evolved over the eons. In particular, the problems arise when cultural evolution runs up against biological evolution.

The camp, and the area it controlled, became important in and of itself (see above). This meant the possibility of conflict between rival groups for the same area. With that conflict came the possibility of battle and war, and the violation of the principle of self-preservation. In other words, individuals would die in defense of their camp. Defense, in this case, can be defined as either protecting against attack from outside, or attacking to gain better resources, which would defend the band against the shortcomings of the band's current situation. This fell to the males for biological and cultural reasons. First, males are biologically less valuable than females; second, the males' competitive nature would suit them for conflict, both against an enemy (perceived or real) and against other males in the group with whom each male is competing for status (the better the warrior, the higher the status); third, the males' hunting skills are easily adapted from killing game to killing each other. Thus, the camp would lead to a widening and intensification of the normal male competitiveness.

Sex and reproduction would also change dramatically. The rise of the nuclear family and its accompanying knowledge of paternity and increase in male participation in rearing children would lead to a change in male/female relationships. The extended training period would reduce the number of children any female could have. With the male devoting his attention to her, rather than being promiscuous himself and siring as many children as possible, each child would become more important to him. Thus, he male would become possessive and jealous, and wish to control the female's sex life -- no more casual sex or promiscuity for her. This would be to insure, or at least improve the chances, that any children she had were his, justifying his investment in her and her offspring.

Men's and women's lives would have changed even more as society developed beyond the gatherer-hunter stage. When the gathering of resources turned to accumulation of material goods that could be transported into the future (See "Greed" in Chapters Three and Four for a discussion of this), and the means of collecting those goods, women's share in the division of labor lost status. The invention of agriculture, animal husbandry and trade contributed to the lessening of women's status as providers for the community. All three replaced hunting as the men's contribution to the community.

It was logical that the men would take on the tasks of agriculture, herding, and trading. It is probable that women invented agriculture, since they were the ones most intimately acquainted with plant life, and most likely to have noticed the relationship between dropped seeds and later plant growth. However, as agriculture turned from haphazard to large scale, it joined herding and trading as occupations bearing many of the characteristics of hunting: distance, time away from the central area, lack of interaction with infants and young children, competition with other men for the best deal or greatest yield, individual decision making, etc.. Such characteristics fit the evolutionary path of males more than that of females. Thus, men would be the members of a community most likely to be involved in these occupations.

In addition, women would become valuable commodities in and of themselves. The most valuable members of any animal species are those that bear and rear young, that pass on genes, that guarantee posterity. Women were those members of human society. However, human society dealt with not just the immediate future, but months and years in the future. Women and their special ability to produce life, and the human ability to project that ability far into the future, made a woman more valuable than any other possible commodity. They were a resource transportable into the future that provided not only the survival of the individual, but the survival of the individual's genes. With men controlling trade, and the ones concerned with guaranteeing paternity (after all, a woman knows who is the mother her child; men can never be absolutely certain), having control over women as reproductive beings became a priority for men. This led to male-dominated society considering women as chattel, to the harem, the dowry, the necessity for female virginity, the duenna, parental permission, marriage and divorce, draconian punishment for adulterous females, chastity belts, and all other societally imposed restrictions on male/female interactions (such interactions were assumed to be sexual and therefore for reproduction). All were designed to guarantee the paternity of any offspring a woman had, that her children were also her mate's.

Human culture has, of course, continued to evolve, at an ever increasing, if uneven, pace. Much of this evolution has been the result of the human ability to think and create. We have gone from the horse and buggy to the space shuttle in less than a century. However, more problems arise as societies evolve at different rates and in different directions. Technology allows all societies to interact, but the disparities in their cultures can cause conflict. What one culture considers the way for people to relate to each other can be anathema to another. One need merely observe the difference in attitudes about women, children, men, competition, cooperation, status, etc. (by both men and women) in American, Iranian and Japanese societies. They run the gamut from medieval to modern.

Even within a society there are disparities. The United States is a mosaic of conflicting cultures. You just have to walk a few blocks down a single street in a major city to see this, as you pass from Chinatown to Little Italy to the French Quarter, etc.. Each culture has evolved its own priorities, attitudes, taboos and necessities, that influence the way each member of that culture perceives the world and the people around rher.

Cultural evolution created new paths in the human psyche. For this book, those new paths included self-esteem, personal enjoyment, constructiveness, destructiveness, curiosity (beyond the proverbial cat's), imitation, and altruism.

 

Notes

10 A sense of "home" is one that relates a location to emotional, physical or mental ease. This is evident in the number of phrases and cliches relating to "home": "Home is where the heart is"; "home is where you hang your hat"; "Home, Sweet Home"; "A man's home is his castle"; "Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home"; etc..
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11 We'll stick to primates, since their lifestyle is probably the most like that of protohumans.
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12 Although large game such as deer or pig, or game that required a cooperative hunt to bring down such as elephants or rhinoceros, was undoubtedly shared among all the members of the band, it is probable that small game (rabbits, birds, etc.) were too small to provide more than a taste to each member of the group. However, it would be sufficient to provide a good meal for three or four. Thus, small game probably remained the proerty of the hunter who brought it in, to share as he deemed fit.

13 As Harry says to Sally in When Harry Met Sally, men and women can't be friends -- sex always gets in the way.

14 Competition between the males would turn from breast-beating and intimidation to demonstrations of skill. Such demonstrations would establish their status, and gain them greater breeding rights, or the right to mate with the most desirable female(s).

 


Copyright © 1996 Richard F. Taflinger.
This and all other pages created by and containing the original work of Richard F. Taflinger are copyrighted, and are thus subject to fair use policies, and may not be copied, in whole or in part, without express written permission of the author richt@turbonet.com
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