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    [MUSIC]
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    In the
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    previous
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    lesson, we saw
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    that for more than 2 million years, earth
    was populated by a number of human
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    species, not just by one.
    We also saw that all these human species
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    were unimportant animals with only a small
    impact on the ecosystem around them.
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    Then about 70,000 years ago, something
    changed.
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    One particular human specie, our specie,
    Homo sapiens, spread out of East Africa.
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    Settled the entire world.
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    Drove to extinction all the other human
    species, and became the most powerful
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    animal and most important animal on planet
    earth.
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    How did this happen?
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    What is the sapiens secret of success?
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    It is not easy to answer this
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    question because Homo Sapians has actually
    been around for
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    much more than just 70,000 years and
    previous
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    to that date, it didn't do anything
    special.
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    Sapians living
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    in East Africa, say about a 100,000 years
    ago.
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    Already looked just like us.
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    They had bodies similar to ours.
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    If you put them in jeans and t-shirts you
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    couldn't tell the difference between them
    and modern people.
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    And if you took a dead body of a sapiens
    from about one hundred thousand years ago
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    and you gave a modern doctor, a modern anatomist to
    dissect and analysis and
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    look inside, look in it.
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    He couldn't tell that there was anything
    different between
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    [UNKNOWN]
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    bodies and our bodies.
    Even the brains of people a
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    100,000 years ago were the same as ours in
    both size and
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    external shape.
    Yet, these archaic sapiens from a 100 to
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    120,000 years ago, they did not produce.
    Any
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    sophisticated tool.
    They did not accomplish any special feats.
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    And they did not enjoy any marked
    advantage over the other human
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    species around like the Neanderthals or
    the Erectus or a Homo Denisova.
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    In fact, when some ancient sapiens
    migrated for
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    the first time to the Middle East about
    100,000
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    years ago, they were driven back by the
    Neanderthals
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    who were the local population in the
    Middle East
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    we have evidence.
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    We found the remains of sapiens in various
    sites in Middle East
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    mainly around what is today Israel and
    Palestine, and Jordan, and Lebanon.
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    We have evidence that sapiens actually
    reached for this, for the first
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    time these areas about a 100,000 years ago
    and not 70,000 years ago.
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    And after some time the remains of the
    sapiens
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    disappear And we find, and we continue to
    find only Neanderthal remains.
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    So these leads most scholars to agree that
    sapiens made the
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    first attempt to migrate from East
    Africa to towards
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    the Middle East, about a 100,000 years ago
    and during that first encounter
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    between sapiens and Neanderthals, the
    Neanderthals were better.
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    They were more powerful, they were more
    adaptive
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    to the environment and they won.
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    And the sapiens disappeared from the
    Middle
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    East and stayed only in East Africa.
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    However, 30,000 years later, which is
    about 70,000 years ago, something amazing
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    happened to Homo sapiens and it then began
    doing very special things not only
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    in East Africa but spreading from there
    and settling all over the world.
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    The first amazing thing, the first
    evidence we have, that something truly
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    remarkable was happening to sapiens about
    70,000 years ago is that,
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    at that time, sapiens bands left Africa
    for a second time.
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    Not all the sapiens.
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    Some sapiens stayed behind in East Africa.
    But some sapiens bands
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    around 70,000 years ago.
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    Again, migrated from East Africa to the
    Arabian Peninsula in the Middle East.
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    And this time, they drove the Neanderthal
    and all the other human species,
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    not only for the Middle East but from the
    face of the Earth.
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    Droves them to complete extinction.
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    Within a remarkably short time, sapiens
    managed to settle not only
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    the Middle East but also Europe, and
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    Central Asia, and South Asia, and East
    Asia.
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    sapiens reached China and Korea about
    60,000 years ago.
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    About 45,000 years ago sapiens did
    something even more remarkable.
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    They crossed the open sea and landed in
    Australia.
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    A continent to which no previous human
    species
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    have managed to reach.
    No, no previous species.
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    No, no, no, not the Erectus, not the
    Neanderthal.
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    Nobody reached Australia until sapiens
    landed on
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    the Australian beach about 45,000 years
    ago.
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    Later on sapiens spread to another
    continent which no previous human reached.
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    Which is the continent of America.
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    No previous human species reached America
    before
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    sapiens did it about 15,000 years ago, 15,
    1, 5
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    thousand years ago.
    These were extraordinary achievements.
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    because in order to reach Australia,
    sapiens, they couldn't
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    swim to Austrlia, they had to somehow
    cross the ocean.
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    And in order to reach America, sapiens
    had first
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    to find out how to survive in the very,
    very cold arctic climate of
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    Northern Siberia and Alaska, where
    temperatures drop
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    to minus 50 degrees Celsius in winter.
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    Because this is how sapiens reached
    America from Siberian Alaska.
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    So in order to reach America, sapiens
    coming from East
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    Africa, first had to find out how you can
    survive in
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    Siberia and Alaska.
    In order to settle all these places,
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    Europe, Asia, Australia, America.
    Sapiens had to adopt very, very quickly.
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    Quickly in evolutionary terms, to
    completely new ecological conditions.
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    As you remember, sapiens evolved for the
    first time in East Africa.
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    And lived in East Africa
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    for 100,00 or 200,000 years.
    And sapiens were, was very well adapted to
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    the warm climate of the African Savannah.
    And to the other ecological conditions.
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    To the animals of African savanna, to the
    plants of
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    African savanna, to the geography, to the
    topography, and so fort.
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    But once sapiens begins spreading over the
    world, they had within a few thousand
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    years To adapt themselves to complely new
    conditons.
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    The same sapiens, basically the same
    sapiens, who lived for tens of
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    thousands of years in East Africa,
    suddenly you find them in Russia.
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    You find them in India.
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    You find them in New Guinea.
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    And they had to adapt to living in the
    very
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    cold conditions of Russia or in the
    jungles of New Guinea.
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    Even though for hundreds of thousands
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    of years, they have been adapting to the
    very different conditions of East Africa.
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    So, this is the first indication that
    something truly amazing
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    was happening to Homo sapiens beginning
    about 70,000 years ago.
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    And this is that sapiens suddenly spread.
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    All over the world and not only spread all
    over the world,
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    but some how managed to adapt to
    completely
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    new ecological conditions within a very,
    very short time.
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    The second indication that something truly
    amazing was happening to Homo
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    sapiens about 70,000 years ago, was the
    appearance of new technologies.
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    one of the most important technologies to
    appear, to start appearing around 70,000
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    years ago is probably boats or other kinds
    of sailing craft.
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    As I mentioned earlier, around 45,000 or
    50,000 years ago,
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    sapiens for the first time, reached the
    continent of Australia.
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    Which no previous human specie has managed
    to do.
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    And it was a very, eh, eh, difficult thing
    to
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    do because in order to reach Australia
    from Southeast Asia
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    you some how had to cross the ocean and
    it's
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    a big, it's quite a big gap separating the
    two.
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    You couldn't swim there, even if you knew
    that Australia is waiting for you.
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    And how could you know that if you've
    never been there?
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    So most scholars estimate that around that
    time
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    45,000, 50,000 years ago.
    Sapiens in Southeast Asia in what is today
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    Indonesia, in the island of Indonesia.
    They already developed some kind of
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    sailing craft or boats or rafts and also
    began developing a sea faring society.
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    A society of people who were used to
    sailing, to sailing on the sea.
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    And this is how they reached Australia,
    and later
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    on reached other islands, like Japan and
    Taiwan and
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    so forth.
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    So this was one very important invention
    the boat or the sailing craft.
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    Another very important invention, which we
    begin to see in the,
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    in archaeological record about 40, 50
    thousand years ago is the needle.
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    Now, this may not strike as you as a
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    particularly revolutionary invention, the
    needle, but the needle was actually
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    one of the most important inventions in
    the whole of, whole history of human kind.
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    What was so important about needles.
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    Well, well people were able to make all
    kinds
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    of, of cloth even before the invention of
    the needle.
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    Like Neanderthals, apparently also had
    some kind of clothing.
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    They killed a bear or they killed some,
    some,
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    and a deer and they took the skin or the
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    fur and put it, put it on them to, to to
    warm themselves This is something that
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    previous human species could do.
    But they could not sew things together.
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    Because they didn't have needles and, and,
    and it couldn't be done.
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    Once sapiens invented needles, sapiens
    were able to
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    start sewing and making all kinds of, of
    new things.
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    New clothes especially thermal thermal
    clothes.
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    Which were made from layers of fur eh,
    inter spaced with layers
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    of skin sewn close together with the help
    of needles, and
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    they could start making all kinds of boots
    and tents and, and things like this.
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    And this was the key for the sapiens,
    settlement of very cold
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    areas like Siberia and Alaska.
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    Even the Neanderthals were very well
    adapted to living in ice age Europe.
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    They were unable to move into Scandinavia
    or into
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    eh, Northern Siberia because it was too
    cold for them.
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    But sapiens was adapted to the hot
    conditions of Africa
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    did manage to settle Siberia because they
    had the needle and
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    they could sew these tents and boots and
    thermal outfits and, and things like that.
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    Another interesting invention that people
    that sapiens
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    probably made around that time is oil
    lamps.
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    small lamps made of stone or clay, in
    which
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    sapiens put the fat of animals that they
    hunted.
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    And then lighted it and they had a lamp.
    And this is
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    how they were able not only to crawl into
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    all kinds of caves but also to produce
    magnificent art.
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    On the walls of the caves the famous cave
    paintings.
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    Well think about it, how could they, okay,
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    they could crawl into caves even without
    light.
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    But, how to produce amazing pictures on
    the walls.
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    And what's the purpose of producing them
    if you can't see them?
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    Unless you have light.
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    And these oil lamps, which arcahologists
    have, have found the remains of,
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    of a few of these oil lamps from 40,
    50,000 years ago.
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    Were the key to this artistic revolution.
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    One of the keys to this artistic
    revolution.
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    aside from the invention of a new
    technology.
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    Like the oil lamp and the boat and the and
    the needle.
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    There were also, also constant development
    of all technology.
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    Like stone knives and spear points, and
    hammers, and axes, and things like that.
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    Previously, up to about 70,000 years ago
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    we find that people, Neanderthals,
    Erectus, were making,
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    and also sapiens, were making exactly the
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    same tools, exactly the same, say, spear
    points
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    for hundred of thousands of years without
    change.
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    From about 70,000 years ago onwards we
    begin to see continuous change.
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    In the technology of things like spear
    points.
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    Every few thousands of hundreds of years,
    you have
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    a new style of spear points or of knives.
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    So this is another thing that, that
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    happened, not only the invention of
    completely
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    new technolgy, but the continuous
    improvement.
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    Of all technology.
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    During the same period, beginning 70,000
    years ago.
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    We also have the first evidence for art
    and for jewelry.
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    We find the first evidence for trade
    between different bands.
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    We'll speak about it later on.
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    We find the first evidence for complex
    societies.
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    Societies comprising hundreds of people,
    and not just dozens of people.
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    And we find the first evidence of
    religion.
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    As an example look at this remarkable
    ivory
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    statue made by sapiens in Germany about
    30,000 years ago.
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    What do you see?
    You see a lion man or lioness woman.
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    It's, it's a bit difficult it would tell
    the gender.
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    But it's very clear that the body of
    whatever is depicted in the statue.
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    The body is human.
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    Whereas the head is the head of a lion or
    a lioness.
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    This is one of the earliest pieces of
    evidence.
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    Not only for art, but also for the ability
    of sapiens to imagine things that don't
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    really exist.
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    There weren't any lion man alive in
    Germany about 30,000 years ago.
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    There was nowhere that the artists who
    have made
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    this statue could have seen a lion man.
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    Lion men only existed only in the fertile
    imagination of sapiens.
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    How to account for this wave of invention,
    new inventions and
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    changes, and technological revolutions.
  • 15:45 - 15:50
    How to account for the sudden appearance
    of art and religion and
  • 15:50 - 15:54
    the new political structures and perhaps,
    above all, how to account for the
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    quick spreading of sapiens over the entire
    world, the extinctions of the other
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    human species and the settlement of new
    territories like Australia and America.
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    Well, most scholars believe
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    that all these achievements were the
    result
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    of a revolution in sapiens' cognitive
    abilities.
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    What are the cognitive abilities?
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    Well, cognitive abilities are the
    abilities to
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    communicate, to remember to learn, to
    think.
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    These are all the cognitive abilities.
    It seems that sapiens who lived
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    100,000 years ago in East Africa, they may
    have looked exactly like us.
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    And they may have had brains the same size
    and shape external shape as our brains
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    but they had very different, more limited,
    cognitive abilities.
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    They could not talk and think
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    like you and me.
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    They, they talk and they thought in some
    way but in
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    a much more restricted and less
    sophisticated way than you and me.
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    In contrast the people who drove the
    Neanderthals to extinction
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    about 30,000 years ago, the people who
    settled the continent
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    of Australia for the first time, and the
    people who
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    calmed the Stael lion man, already
    talked and thought like
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    you and me.
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    They did not talk and think in English,
    they had their own language but
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    in, in the basic abilities of thinking and
    talking, they were like you and me.
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    The disappearance of new ways of talking
    and thinking, between about 70,000 years
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    ago and about 30,000 years ago, is called
    the cognitive revolution.
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    The first
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    big revolution of history basically the
    revolution that started history.
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    Prior to the cognitive revolution humans
    were no different from any other animal.
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    They had biology and not history.
  • 17:54 - 17:57
    History begins with the cognitive
    revolution.
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    Now how to explain this revolution.
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    After all, there was as I said before,
    there was no big change in the body
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    of sapiens.
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    there was not even any significant change
    in the
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    size or in the external shape of the
    sapiens brain.
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    So how to account for the fact that
    without any any change that
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    we can see in the body or the brain,
    suddenly there appeared amazing
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    new cognitive abilities.
    Well, scholars, most scholars,
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    believe that there must have been some
    relatively small change.
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    In the internal structure of the brain,
    not in the size or external shape but in
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    the internal structure of the brain that
    led
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    to all the big revolutions in sapiens'
    abilities.
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    Perhaps, this is just a theorist
    speculation.
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    We don't have any firm evidence, but it's
    the best speculation we have.
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    Perhaps there were some relative,
    relatively
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    small genetic mutation that caused two
    parts
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    of the brain, which were previously
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    separate separated to connect to each
    other.
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    And this resulted in all the new amazing
    cognitive abilities.
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    Now, it's just a theory.
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    We don't really know it for sure because
    there are no
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    frozen brains from 50,000 years ago and
    100,000
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    years ago that we can compare to each
    other.
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    But it's the best theory we have at the
    present.
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    If we accept this.
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    That there was some small change in the
    internal structure of the brain.
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    how to account for it?
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    Or more precisely, how to account for the
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    fact that this, remarkable change happened
    to sapiens.
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    And not to Neanderthals or Denisovans or
    some
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    other human species or some other animal
    species.
  • 19:54 - 20:00
    As far as we know it was pure chance that,
    that might well have been the result of
  • 20:00 - 20:06
    some tiny biological reaction in sapiens
    DNA that lead to the, to the mutation.
  • 20:06 - 20:09
    And if this tiny biochemical a, a, a
  • 20:09 - 20:13
    reaction did not take place, then human
    may
  • 20:13 - 20:16
    well have remained insignificant animals
    to this day or
  • 20:16 - 20:21
    the world today might have been governed
    by Neanderthals.
  • 20:21 - 20:23
    And the sapiens would've become extinct.
  • 20:23 - 20:27
    So we don't really know, we don't have a
    good answer why this
  • 20:27 - 20:31
    change happened to sapiens and not to
    Neanderthals.
  • 20:31 - 20:39
    And also, we don't have a very clear
    theory about what was the biological and
  • 20:39 - 20:44
    the more logical factors that lead to the
    whole cognitive change.
  • 20:44 - 20:47
    But this is less important for our
    purposes.
  • 20:47 - 20:53
    What is very important for understanding
    human history
  • 20:53 - 20:59
    is to understand what exactly was the
    change in sapiens cognitive abilities.
  • 20:59 - 21:04
    What was so special about the new way in
    which sapiens
  • 21:04 - 21:06
    thought and talked?
  • 21:06 - 21:11
    What was so special about the new sap,
    sapiens language?
  • 21:11 - 21:14
    This is what we will discuss throughout
    all
  • 21:14 - 21:17
    the next parts of the this entire lesson.
  • 21:17 - 21:23
    We'll try to understand what is so special
    about the way that we sapiens think and
  • 21:23 - 21:25
    talk and how is it different from the
  • 21:25 - 21:29
    way all other animals and Neanderthals and
    chimpanzees
  • 21:29 - 21:29
    think and talk.
  • 21:29 - 21:35
    In other words, these, all the other
    sections of this lesson will be
  • 21:35 - 21:40
    dedicated to understanding what is so
    special about our language.
  • 21:41 - 21:44
    In order to answer this question.
  • 21:44 - 21:48
    In the next segments, we will discuss not
    only the world of the Stone
  • 21:48 - 21:53
    Age but also the world today, which is
    more familiar to most of you.
  • 21:53 - 22:00
    In order again to understand what
    is so special about our language that has
  • 22:00 - 22:03
    made us the masters of the world
  • 22:03 - 22:16
    [MUSIC]
Title:
Video Language:
English
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for https:/.../index.mp4
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for https:/.../index.mp4

English subtitles

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