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Being Bipedal was a key step in becoming human. Many of our other abilities, and liabilities, began with bipedalism. On this episode:When bipedalism?Why bipedalism?We dispell some myths and establish some likelihoods about this uhique and pleuripotent trait.See the video of this episode here:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YZa3WwVyNeo&t=390sBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-history-of-being-human--5806452/support.
Cardy, Matt, and Mat are here this week to talk about cursed meals they've eaten. Before all of that, though, there are thoughts on the madness that is Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga, why Hellblade 2 isn't quite working for them, the intriguing concept behind sci-fi survival game The Alters, and another of Cardy's foreign film recommendations in the shape of Hirokazu Kore-eda's Monster. As ever, there's also the regular dose of madness thanks to your feedback, including multiple unseasoned ground beef recipes. Send in your food nonsense to ign_ukfeedback@ign.com (or questions and thoughts about games, TV, and films – we should probably stay on topic at least 60% of the time). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The OG, greatest generation of Human ever! At least if your metric is a dogged determination to keep existing.For 2 million years these prehistoric hominins wandered far and wide, high and low, filling every available lakeshore and riverbed. What can we know about them? Their looks, abilities, traits? Did they use fire? Language? Clothing? Where did they come from and get to?And why, after such a successful run, did they exit the world stage?Today on the History of Being Human, the essential guide to all things Erectus.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5806452/advertisement
This week is all over the board... stupidity at its finest!
This discovery will change the course of history! Click here to Join The SwoleFam Use Code "GTTFG" to get 10% OFF ALL MERCH! Submit A Question For The Show Turn On Livestream Notifications Via Telegram Get On Papa Swolio's Email List Download The 7 Pillars Ebook Watch The Daily Swole Try A Swolega Class From Inside Swolenormous X Get Your Free $10 In Bitcoin Questions? Email Us: Support@Swolenormous.com
En los bosques tropicales del sur de china floreció un tipo humano que hace 1.500.000 de años, tomo conciencia de su propia existencia: el Homo erectus Sapiens. Este tipo de humano desarrollo una inteligencia que no se volvería a ver en la tierra hasta la aparición de Homo Sapiens Sapiens casi 1 millón y medio de años después. Conoceremos las fanttasticas formas de vida de este grupo de humanos del pleistoceno que se organizaron en matriarcados, desarrollaron el arte y tecnologías extraordinarias. Índice: 1. Orígenes de Homo Erectus Sapiens. 2. Forma de vida, y producción de recursos. 3. Matriarcado, y reproducción social. 4. Arte y creencias. 5. Ocaso de la especie. 6. Comentario Si te ha gustado, y crees que la literatura moderna en audio lo merece, dale un like que ayuda con el algoritmo. Muchas gracias por estar ahí. 📧¿Queréis contarnos algo? ficcionhistoriapodcast@gmail.com Telegram: https://t.me/HistoriaFiccionChat Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ficcionhistoria/ Twitter: @ficcionhistoria Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8LXvT2vus9IQ1Sad-bjVsg Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/historiaficcion Historia ficción forma parte de 📀 Ivoox Originals. • Créditos música the-path-of-the-goblin-king, The Curtain Rises, The snow Queen, by Kevin Macleod, Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/7078- the-path-of-the-goblin-king License: Infraction - No Copyright Music at https://www.youtube.com/@Infraction Skinny Flex feat. El Patron 970 – Con su tema las JORDAN MANCHÁS (Official Video) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YuGibFTTXuQ Lectura Clásica: Fragmento de Los trabajos y los días de Hesíodo sobre la edad de oro. Fragmento de la edad de Oro en el Quijote. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana discuss Yuval Harari's bestseller “Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind,” a book that tracks the growth and development of human societies and cultures from the Stone Age through the modern day, and presents several key revolutions as being what changed everything over time and put humans on a path to in large part master the world around them in a way that no other animal could dream of. “Sapiens” (Yuval Noah Harari)
Bienvenue aux Voix des Chapitres ! La nouvelle chaîne pour parler des littératures de l'imaginaire.Après avoir proposé différents ouvrages pour rentrer dans la SF, on s'attaque au deuxième genre, celui de la Fantasy. Ce qui définit ce genre, c'est l'immersion dans un nouveau monde, où les règles ne sont plus celles de notre réalité. Préparez-vous pour la magie et l'aventure !Restez un instant et écoutez-nous... Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/les_voix_des_chapitres/?hl=frFacebook : https://www.facebook.com/LesVoixDesChapitres/Tiktok : https://www.tiktok.com/@lesvoixdeschapitres Voici les œuvres présentées :Michael Moorcock, Cycle d'Elric,1961, disponible chez PocketJulien Blondel, Robin Recht, Didier Poli, Jean Bastide, Elric, 2017, disponible chez GlénatChristopher Paolini, Eragon, 2003, disponible chez BayardWandy et Richard Pini, Elfquest, 1978, disponible chez Snorgleux éditionsSerge le Tendre, Régis Loisel, La quête de l'oiseau du temps, 1984, disponible chez GlénatKentaro Miura, Berserk, 1989, disponible chez Glénat Crédits musicaux :The Oh Hellos, Soldier, Poet, King, cover by Cullen Vance, 2021Blue Oyster Cult, Black Blade, Cultosaürus Erectus, 1980Patrick Doyle, Eragon Theme, Eragon OST, 2006Howard Shore, The Shire, The Lord of the Rings The Fellowship of the Ring OST, 2001Skywise, A Wolfrider's Reflections, A Wolfrider's Reflections, 1987Charles Callet, Bragon, La quête de l'oiseau du temps OST, 1989Susumu Hirasawa, Behelit, Berserk OST, 1997 Ecrit et monté par Tim et JulienLogo et designs créés par Alynkyarthttps://www.instagram.com/_alinkyart_/?hl=frJingle d'introduction créé par Jules
The guys discuss the evolution of man! Or the recession of men, especially men that host a podcast and try to talk about stuff. What does the future of human kind look like, where's it going and what do we do when we get there? Make a podcast and complain about stuff of course!Support the show
Spéciale Annie Ernaux : visite du bureau de l'écrivaine, chez elle à Cergy-Pontoise, à l'occasion de la remise de son prix Nobel de Littérature à Stockholm. "Erectus, le dernier hiver" de Xavier Müller chez XO Editions, coup de coeur de Daniel Verdier de Tom' Librairie à Perros-Guirec dans les Côtes d'Armor.
Hear how telling each other stories helped us evolve My audience knows how much I like to learn about early human evolution and how we continue to adapt to changing times. Thanks to my former PR guru, Sarah Wilson, I was introduced to Byron Reese, who is a futurist, an author and an entrepreneur. He tends to see things through that fresh lens I always talk about. Byron's new book (his fourth) is called, Stories, Dice, and Rocks that Think: How Humans Learned to See the Future—and Shape It. This is a fascinating book that provides a new look at the history and destiny of humanity. Storytelling allows us to envision the future. Dice teach us about probability, which enables us to try to predict the future. And rocks that think—a reference to a computer's CPU—enable us to build the future. Listen in! Watch and listen to our conversation here From our very beginnings, we've been a very different type of being. I wasn't quite sure what Byron's book is about until I opened the first pages and began to wander with him through the still unanswered questions about how humans became these amazing creatures with story-making minds, the ability to think and then converse about their ideas, and the wherewithall to develop cultures that we can share, change and believe to be our best realities. As humans, the one thing we must do is see the future. All other animals live in the moment. Perhaps some have evolved genetic capabilities that enable them to survive in different environments—like the 40,000 ant species that populate the world. But humans are one species, and we know we have a past and a future. That future is important. We know we are not immortal. Do other animals plan for the afterlife? Develop religions? Think big philosophical thoughts? From our thinking came our language, and conversations that are essential to our being and our survival. I invite you to listen in or read the transcript of our conversation because it's fascinatin. Just remember, you have a unique place on this earth. Treat it, and yourself, kindly. If you'd like to connect with Byron, you can find him on LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook and his website, and you can email him at byronreese@gmail.com. For more about storytelling and how the future shapes us, start here Blog: What Is Futurism And Do You Need It? Blog: How Storytelling Can Transform Your Culture And Energize Your Team Podcast: Now Is No Time To Be Afraid Of This Blurry Future Additional resources for you My two award-winning books: Rethink: Smashing The Myths of Women in Businessand On the Brink: A Fresh Lens to Take Your Business to New Heights Our website: Simon Associates Management Consultants Read the transcript of our podcast here Andi Simon: Welcome to On the Brink With Andi Simon. Hi, I'm Andi Simon. As you know, I'm your host and your guide, and my job is to get you off the brink. I want you to soar. But the only way you can do that is if you can see, feel and think in new ways so that you can change what you've been doing. The times are changing, and we're futurists. We need to see what's coming and begin to make stories up about them. That's what Simon Associates does. And that's about all the advertising I'm going to tell you about. Our job is to help you change. People hate to change. Today, I found a marvelous, marvelous person who came to me through my PR firm of the past: Sarah Wilson. Byron Reese is amazing. Let me tell you about him and then he'll tell you about your new self. And I love his face. Byron is an Austin-based entrepreneur with a quarter century of experience building and running technology companies. It's gonna be interesting listening to how he's applied it in his new book today. The new book is called Stories, Dice, and Rocks that Think, and don't kid yourself: we're going to be talking a lot about how humans learn to see the future and shaping our conversation for today. He's a recognized authority on AI, and holds a number of technology patents. He's also a futurist. Now, this podcast has been ranked among the top 20 futurists podcasts. I didn't know I was a futurist. But I like to help you see that future. And if you can't see it, you can't live today. Byron gives talks around the globe about how technology is changing work, education and culture, like everything. And it's fun to think about it. He's an author of four books. But today, I think we're going to talk about this new one because it adds some dimension to all the others that he's put together. Byron, thank you for joining me today. Byron Reese: Thank you for having me. Andi Simon: It's so much fun to share with the listener, or the viewer. Who is Byron Reese? Give us your journey so we can talk about how you got here because everything had a little of the past, a little of the future, and a lot of hard work to come. Tell us about your book, Stories, Dice, and Rocks that Think. How did Byron come up with it? Byron Reese: Well, I've always been in technology, because I've always been really interested in it. I'm not a gadget person, but I'm really interested in the idea of technology. And it's this thing we kind of discovered as a species that allows us to amplify what we're able to do without it. There was a time that we think we hit a genetic bottleneck a long time ago, and there were just 1,000 or 2,000 humans left and nobody would have bet on us then. And here we are. It's because we learned that trick about technology. And so I've always just been really intrigued by the idea of technology. And so I've done that as a business. And then I started writing. Every morning before I got to work, I would just start writing and those became the books that I wrote. And they're just kind of my own journey of what I think about and I find interesting. Andi Simon: Well, you don't sort of just stumble into being an AI or a patent expert in technology. Was this important as you were growing up, did you have particular role models or aha moments, or things that just started making you curious? Byron Reese: I grew up on a farm in East Texas, outside of a town with only 500 people. So it was not an area steeped in technology. But my father had a corporate job for 30-something years, and his father worked in the railroad and his father operated a ferry. And when I looked back, it always seemed like they kind of did the thing that epitomized their times. It was the Western migration, and then the railroad, and then just the corporate thing that came up and unemployment and all of that, and I knew growing up that you could just tell it was technology. And so I went to college and met my wife or the woman who would become my wife, and we moved to the Bay Area, to be a part of that energy that was in the 90s. And we did that for a while. And then when we decided to start a family, we moved back to Texas, to Austin, and we raised and homeschooled our children. And that's me. Andi Simon: That's a very interesting story, your reflection on how each of your parents, grandparents, and so forth, was reflecting the times in which they were living. You in some ways are reflecting the times that we're living in now, which I would not have thought about, but if the listener or viewer is listening and watching: think about it. Where are you now because of where we are now as a society? This book, though, has a particular purpose. And I think it would be good to talk about, it's not a textbook, it is a history of humankind in a very important way, which should give the listener and the viewer some time to think about the times that we are in. Because somehow, 50,000 years ago, we had a quantum leap in our brain. And we are just like any other animal. Remember, we are one species, there are 40,000 different ant species. That's how they have mutated and populated the world. We're just one. And we probably can be intimate with anyone across the globe, which is sort of an interesting phenomenon. But we also can see the future and anticipate our mortality, and look back on the past and worry about our memory. Was it right? Was it wrong? And was it different than what actually happened? So we are an interesting human. Let's talk about Byron. How did this book begin to develop? And let us talk about the three phases that so fascinated you. Byron Reese: They're very interested in the question of why. Why we're different from animals, because you'll always hear: we're just another animal. But when you look around the world, it doesn't look that way. It really looks like we're aliens. And everything else is kind of native. But we're very different in our cities and literature and all that. And we really got curious why that happened. And the short answer is, we believe in two things that don't exist. We believe in the future and the past. And animals don't. That's a contentious statement, but I try to justify it in the book. And what we do is, we have what's known as episodic memory, where we remember specific things that happened to us, which animals don't. They don't make predictions into the future, maybe just a minute into the future. Maybe I'm thinking, Okay, I want to climb that tree and get an apple. What's the best way to do it? Those sorts of things. And those were, I think, the first stories we told ourselves. They were in fiction, they were like us. We think that way. We kind of picture these different things, very different from other creatures. The coolest thing I learned writing this book is probably that it was a creature that lived before it's called Homo Erectus. And Erectus lived on this planet 1.6 million years, 80,000 generations, and simply had one tool: the hand axe. It looks like a big arrowhead. And that's it. And no matter when you find these, on which of three continents you find them, they're all alike. And that's really mysterious because you would think if in 80,000 generations, everybody was just copying their parents, then eventually they would, like the telephone game, they would just change and in different regions, but they didn't. They're all identical. And what does that mean? It means Erectus didn't know they were making those tools, the way a bird doesn't know they're building a nest, they just do it. But it isn't something that they know how to do. It's not a cultural object, or technological object, it's a genetic object. You see a beaver, if you put a recording of music, of running water in the middle of the field, and a beaver walks by the dam over it, they don't really know what they're doing, but they know how to build that one dam. So, you think about that: 80,000 generations where nothing happened. And then you think about us. We only took three generations to get from Kitty Hawk to the moon. And you realize we are a very different thing. And I kind of think it's this for millions of years, billions of years: the only place we had to write down what we learned was in our DNA. It took millions of years to write one new thing. And then one day, we got what you talked about: language, 40,000-50,000 years ago, and all of a sudden we can think and that's really the power of language. It organizes your thoughts. It's not mere speculation. There's a wonderful quote in the book from Helen Keller, who talked about what her life was like before her teacher came and how she didn't know she was a person. She didn't know she was a discrete thing in the universe. So we got language. Andi Simon: Listen for a second, because I think that for my audience, I know that this is a curious question. We were able to sync and not necessarily communicate our thoughts. And I think that when you are walking in the woods, and there's nobody to talk to, but you're thinking, and you're doing just what our ancestors were doing, then the question always is, and I was fascinated by your effort to try and explain how did that happen, where all of a sudden we went from our thoughts to be able to share our thoughts. And how would they know what those words meant? And was there a quantum leap in the DNA of everyone at the time to be able to understand language? We have, you know, different languages, but they're all very similar in structure. Is it part of our acquired DNA? I mean, this is not simple stuff, because it's really quite interesting about how we took the thinking and turned it into a conversation that you and I can understand each other's meaning. Byron Reese: Yes, absolutely. And of course, we have to speculate a little. And so there's four or five different ideas on how that could have happened. I tend to believe that there was a mutation that happened in one person one time, you know, on some Tuesday morning at 8:30, or something like that happened, that his or her progeny may have inherited. And that's the capacity to think. In language, you see, we don't really have any organs for language. We have to repurpose organs we use for other stuff to be able to do this. And if in fact, language did begin in just one person, in one of these little lonely bands of 100-150 people, then after a few generations, when it had spread among them, they would be superheroes, and they would have superpowers, and they would very quickly displace everything else that didn't have capacity for language. And that's why it looks like it appeared everywhere, all at once. But I think that's what must have happened because human universals. There are a couple of hundreds of these things that all human cultures have. Andi Simon: Yes. Now, the interesting part is, I got fascinated by the cave art, that all of a sudden, we went from no cave. Africa has practically nothing that looks like the European or the Asian cave art that came at a period of time. And it's not stick figures. And even in the Americas, there's amazing art that all of a sudden emerges at once. And we say, How did that happen? You know, your point is that an alien is not so crazy. Talk to us about art, about music, about the flute, the things that emerge and seem to say something about who those people were, who created it, and how they shared something that was difficult to share across continents of that time. And all sudden it all at once. Even getting to Australia. I mean, there's something there worth sharing, more than just reading the book, because I love those stories. That's what makes me go, Oh, how did that happen? What happened? And how did it happen? Byron Reese: You're right, there were no precursors of anything like representative art. And if you look at some of these caves, they are beautiful. I mean, it's just beautiful. I would frame that and hang it on my wall. But the thing to keep in mind is, it wasn't just that they could do that beautifully. It was high tech, like literally, because they were using fat to make the pigments and here they weren't using the power to extend them. For black, they could have used charcoal. They had charcoal in the fire 20 feet away. But it wasn't black enough evidently. And so they figured out a new way to make black pigment using a mineral they had to heat 1200 degrees, which was hard to do and the closest source was 240 miles away. So they had to be mindful enough to go. They had to build scaffolding too and then to your point, digging in those caves in Chile is amazing because it's like King Tut's tomb. It was sealed off and we found it and the footprints, like a boy and his dog or sand, like in the kitchen. But when you excavate those times, you're right, we find musical instruments. The oldest ones we have at the exact same time, and we find the representative art at the exact same time. So whatever gave us language, I think really did a lot more than that. I mean, it made us, and your remark about aliens, I think might be a reference to something in the book where every time I mentioned this to people, they would obviously have bet it's aliens. And it isn't that people think it's aliens, but it is so dramatic and invites something like that. Andi Simon: That makes you ask how, and the problem is, we want answers. And the problem is, we don't have any. And then there were the Neanderthals and Denisovans, and others who looked similar but didn't survive the same way. We still have our DNA, they have their DNA. And so, you know, they were there. But it's a really interesting set of questions. So your point about our ancestors having a DNA that allowed them to produce the same tool everywhere they were, and then humans began to create variety and tremendous ingenuity across the globe. However, we expanded, and then came the Middle Ages and something transformative developed. And I think I'd like to move on a little bit. I mean, that's a lot of time to go from the starting point to major transformation. But I don't care if it's Michelangelo or anybody else in 1716 or 1617: something happened that changed us. Probability theory? What happened? Byron Reese: What happened is, we got this capacity for language, which we then use to imagine these stories that were very mundane. They were just moments ahead. And later, we started articulating them. But once we could imagine the future, we weren't content with that. We're not a particularly contented species. And we weren't competing with that. And we didn't want to just leave the picture, we wanted to know what was going to happen. We wanted to predict it. And that seems like a tall order. But that's what happened. And we, in 1654, these two men, de Fermat and Pascal are writing these letters, they're trying to solve this math problem that is trivially simple. I won't even bore you with it, other than to say, a 10-year-old could solve it. And this is a math problem. The great minds of Europe had worked on it for 100 years. And they needed a new way to think about the future. And that's what they did. And they did it: probability theory. And then, man, it just all happened, you had the first probability textbook within eight years. And the whole modern world, artificial intelligence is just probability theory. High speed, like, it's all, that's what it is, we invented that. And the reason it took so long is because we had to figure out why the future happened the way it did. I mean, a futurist is really that people try to understand why the future unfolded this way, not that way, if I may have a visual aid. There were all different theories on why things happened the way they did. They were destined to happen, and they were fated to happen. Or they can only happen that way. Andi Simon: Or we don't have a clue. Byron Reese: What they never guessed was this: So this is probably something you may have seen at a science museum before. This is a paper full of BBs, I'm about to flip it. And when I do that, the BBs are gonna fold down and they're gonna hit these things. And they can bounce to the left, to the right, and then they'll hit another one. They can bounce to the left or the right, left to the right. And what happens is, every time you do it, you get a normal curve. You can do this all day long. And this is the thing nobody ever imagined was in randomness. Even to this day, if you were to ask me, If you flipped the coin 1000 times, how many times will heads come up? I know how to answer that: 500. But I mean, I've never done it. And I didn't know how to answer it. I would have said, who knows, maybe 100. And then the next time 908, 105, 100. But the chances that it's ever under 400, or more than 600, or one in many billions. It's never happened, it never will happen. And so you think about the most random thing: imagine a coin toss that you can say something that confident about it. And that's the basis of probability theory: you can assign probabilities to things in the future. Andi Simon: I love reading Martin Seligman, his work on humble perspectives. And as I often work with my clients, I tell them that if you want to live today, you have to have some visualization of what tomorrow is gonna bring. Because if not, we will have a very difficult time. You can do the habits of yesterday. We're very happy with them, and comfortable with our habits. But tomorrow isn't going to be like yesterday and may move slowly or quickly. I mean, the pandemic was so catalytic because it showed everybody how in a moment, everything can change, and without any control or decision-making or probability...although I suspect some people have had a probability theory that that was going to happen. But it is an interesting phenomenon for humans because we need to know what's coming in order for us to prepare for it by living now. The past has given us experiential, but we only remember parts of that, not every memory. And if you talk to people about what happened on X day, when we were all together, they each have a different story. And the creativity is that they fit the story into their own stories. And so the story reflects them. They're all the heroes in it, but not really necessarily what the truth is. My favorite quote is, "The only truth is there is no truth." And so then we begin to think about what came out of then, a great creativity there, and then came along your computers and the modern age, more or less, whatever is going on now. And what's coming into the future. Mr. Futurist? What do you see coming? And how are you getting folks to prepare for the uncertainties that are coming next? What do you see happening? Byron Reese: When we got our cognitive eye opening, remember earlier I talked about the only place we had to write things was in our DNA? Well, suddenly, we had a new place. We could write stuff. We could write it in our DNA, but we could also write it just in our head. And that became our DNA. Instead of taking 100,000 years to learn not to eat the purple berries, I could just say, Hey, man, don't eat those purple berries, they'll make you sick. And that's it. That's it, that was a mutation about to spread. Everybody can say, Those purple berries are bad. Well, there's an old essay called iPad that was written seven years ago, where a guy points out, Nobody knows how to make a pencil. There's not a person alive who knows every step of making every part of the pencil, and yet pencils get made, even though nobody knows how to make it. So what has happened in the computer age is, we now know that with writing and computers, the human story is that people will learn stuff, and then they die. And then it's forgotten. Then somebody else comes along, learns something, and then they die, and it's forgotten. Or maybe they told somebody but then they messed it up. And our whole species just kind of resets every generation, a few things filter down but for most things are forgotten. And I think that's what's really going to change is that, I'm gonna have a toothbrush that will tell me if I've got the flu virus in my mouth. And I mean, I want that toothbrush, and it will collect data. And I will have the spoon that will tell me the nutrition of every bite I have. That's collecting data, right? And so it can tell me, Oh, you're not getting enough, whatever. And one after the other. And I think that's kind of what we're building. When we just had probability theory, we basically had paper and pencils, and cycles. That was it. And so between 1654, when we invented probability, to 1954, the world we built, we built with paper. And now, we said, We want to do this, like, on a massive scale, even beyond our own ability. So I think that's what we do. We're collecting evermore data. And we're going to use that data to record the life experiences of everybody, and use those to make everybody else's life better. So that in the future, everyone will be wiser than anyone who's ever lived because everyone will have at least access to this knowledge base. In the book, I guess, all these examples of things that we couldn't have seen in the day, like iodine and salt, because so people wouldn't get goiter. But they didn't know this whole country had an iodine deficiency. And when they measured the average IQ, it went up four points and in some parts of the country, went up 15 points from that one thing in the south, which had a corn based diet, there was niacin deficiency, and we started fortifying corn flakes with niacin. And then that went away. And then we used to put stuff in things like lead. Lead paint and lead constantly and we didn't know, there just wasn't any data. There was no such thing as data before for 16 people. It didn't exist. Why would it? What would you have ever done with data for 16 people? And now, if we had handled the data, you would have been able to see all that stuff in that data. And that is a speculation. I mean, there's an antidepressant called Wellbutrin that after some number of years of being used, some people said, you know, my cravings for cigarettes went down. They studied and they found out, Wow, that's a smoking cessation drug. Very good. They repackaged it down, and, and so forth. So there's everything in the data. But we don't yet have the tools. We have the computers to do it now, like we have processor power. But we don't really have the tools to cope with the kinds of datasets that are being automatically built to try to build this knowledge base. Andi Simon: For a number of years, I taught a course for the Society for Healthcare Strategy and Market Development, and it was called Your Data's Talking to You, Can You Hear It?, because healthcare strategists had an abundance of data points. I'm an anthropologist. Anthropologists are taught early that out of context, data do not exist. And consequently, that abundance of stuff needed to be turned into a story. And I work with them on, Which story are you going to tell to the leadership of your organization, to the middle management, to the physicians? How are you going to craft those data points so one size doesn't fit anyone, because the first thing that doctors start to do is delete your data. The data is wrong. It's the way you crafted a story, using the data to help you see, feel and think about that in a different fashion. And Byron is right, because you know, the computers can't think, maybe they're getting there, but they can't. They can accumulate all of this data, but they can't really interpret it, or craft a story for you. So our uniqueness takes us back to the beginning of our conversation. Think. And if we can think with better insights to what's happening, what could we think about that could be transformative about our society? You know, he writes about education and culture, and it works well, like everything. And how do we think about coming out of pandemic time in a way that gives us an amazing opportunity. I always tell people, Don't waste a crisis. Humans hate to change. The amygdala loves to hijack new ideas. The cortisol comes flying out the minute there's something new. So as you're listening to us, I bet you're saying, Oh, no, and I'm saying, Yes. And begin to think through what's possible. You know, Byron, we've had such a good time, but I think it's time we wrap up a couple of things you don't want our listeners to forget. Byron Reese: The book has one of the purposes of stories, which I accumulated over a couple of years, just reading storybooks. When I was working on this book, I would write it in the mornings, but in the evenings, I read storybooks. And I would just try to figure out what purpose is the story serving, and I think I came up with 20. But if you read the epilogue, one page long, there is a secret 21st purpose that is the biggest one of all when it's the stories that give life meaning. And there's these two different narratives of our lives. One is that, you know, we're just kind of like big bags of chemicals and electrical impulses that careened through space and bumped into other big bags. And then we fizzle out and are forgotten. That's a story and it robs everything of any meaning permanently. But there's another one that says that your life is not that. All life has inherent worth. And that your life is not a domino rally of minute after minute after minute after minute, but that all of the moments of your life are kind of connected in a sequence that tells a story. And can I close the book by asking, who is telling that story? Andi Simon: Well, in that you're leading to something real important, I'm gonna put the book up again soo the folks can see. There we go: Stories, Dice, and Rocks that Think. And it's how humans learn to see the future and shape it. And I think that, from my perspective, what I would like our listeners to walk away with other than to go by the book, is reading with this open mind and being curious. I think it's our curiosity that has become so essential for us to see things through a fresh lens, and to begin to understand. If I hadn't worked with company after company that get stuck or stalled, I'd say to you, Piece of cake, the times have changed, we just adapt. But humans are so convinced that what they do today is the way we should do it, that they forget that we would have never done it that way over all of these centuries. You know, maybe Homo Erectus did the same things with this Chilean tool exactly the same way because it was DNA driven. But for us, we're creators, and we're story makers. And as we listen to each other's stories that capture the insights that come, and begin to see your own life with different purpose and different opportunity, the one thing that we often say in here is that we are mortal. We know that. And that changes the dynamics. Does my dog know to live everyday in the moment? People say, Live in the moment. It's hard to do that because we can see what's coming, even if we're not sure. So where should they buy your book, Byron? Byron Reese: All of the usual places. Andi Simon: And if you buy it on Amazon and like to write reviews, it is a great place to put in a little. It's a great book. And I think you're going to enjoy reading it and reflecting on our own next step. Because if you spent the past year thinking about the future, and the future is here for us to create. And I do think that it's a time of great creativity, and don't waste a crisis because it's a time for you to think in new ways. Thank you. Do you also speak and consult? Are there other things that you can offer our listeners? Byron Reese: Yes, I do. I speak when I'm invited. And that's most of what I do. I'm writing another book, which is due in 33 days, because I've got a big countdown clock on my mantle. Andi Simon: I'm laughing because I could look to November 1. I thank you for taking time out to do this. And we'll do a podcast to discuss your next book and mine. But for now, thank you all for coming today. It's been absolutely a pleasure. Byron Reese wrote this great book, but he's coming up with his next one. But he reflects like I love to do on who we are as humans, where we've been and where we're going and how we're going to do better together. Because it's only together that we can go anywhere. Humans love herds. And we love to be together. And it's hard to be alone. And loneliness often comes from living alone. You send me great emails and you send me great people you want me to interview. It's info@Andisimon.com. And you can find my books there and everything else. And we love to help you see, feel and think in new ways so you can change, so come along and send us your thoughts. Have a great day. Thank you again.
We have revamped once again and have Jeff Scheen on the pod Check out the patreon https://www.patreon.com/GreatHang Follow Myka @Mykafox https://twitter.com/MykaFox https://www.instagram.com/mykafox Follow Tim https://twitter.com/MayorOfFartTown https://www.instagram.com/hot_comic69/
Estamos de vuelta con más de lo que aprendimos en nuestra visita a Erotika y Erectus en Zona Rosa. Desde sábanas de vinil a maneras original de estimular el clítoris, el episodio de hoy tiene algo para todos. Mándanos preguntas, comentarios, y tu rosa de la semana a todorosapodcast@gmail.com Síguenos en twitter y facebook: @TodoRosaPodcast Síguenos en instagram: @TodoRosaPod Cómpranos algo bonito de nuestra wishlist. Edición: Sergio Ursúa --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/todorosapodcast/message
Jesse's autism is showing more and more these days... FOLLOW US! @jessemcomic @mostlycuban
(image source: https://reinoanimalia.fandom.com/es/wiki/Homo_erectus) Host Matthew Donald and guest co-host Lexi Ryan discuss Homo erectus, an early form of human whose name makes us all giggle hearing it, and don't you dare deny it. From the Late Pleistocene, this 5-foot-tall hominid was the first human to speak, wield fire, develop tools, and even take on seafaring, which is all amazing and fascinating stuff… never mind, you're still snickering about its name, aren't you? Eh, me too. Hehe, gay boner... Want to further support the show? Sign up to our Patreon for exclusive bonus content at Patreon.com/MatthewDonald. Also, you can purchase Matthew Donald's dinosaur book "Megazoic" on Amazon by clicking here, its sequel "Megazoic: The Primeval Power" by clicking here, its third installment "Megazoic: The Hunted Ones" by clicking here, or its final installment "Megazoic: An Era's End" by clicking here.
In this episode, Brian and Jim create an LP-length playlist from the two Martin Birch-produced BÖC albums, Cultösaurus Erectus and Fire of Unknown Origin. There's our trademark jolly badinage, more insights than you can shake a stick at, and most of all love. We're so respectful of each other that at some points during the pod we each had to shower and towel off. Not together, obviously. But most of all, that love is flung at you, the listener. So suckle at our opinionated Blue Öyster Cult teats, and take comfort from our words, and our knowledge. Listen to the playlist here: https://spoti.fi/3LMW69B You can buy us a coffee at ko-fi.com/bungo_pony. Follow us on twitter @Bungo_Pony Join the FB group at www.facebook.com/BungoPonyPod/
A big mix-up in Kindergarten class results in some mixed drinks for the kiddies. My Insane FL Nephew, "Pancho Guero" breaks down how it happened. A man who ran a golf cart stealing operation finally met the long arm of the law after stealing 63 carts in 7 states! "Pancho" also has some revealing information from a professor in England about a new "theory" on the Loch Ness Monster. And it's a WHALE of a tale. Plus there's these samples of stupidity... All Over TikTok, People Are Kissing Their Best Friends; Shirtless FL man breaks into restaurant; Steals lava cake, cobbler & ice cream; Cheating Wives Are More Likely to Own a Cat Than Any Other Pet; Neighbor's Warning Sign: ‘Do Not Buy That House'; A USFL Player Got Fired for Wanting Pizza Instead of Chicken Salad; Study: Your Mother-In-Law Bickers With You Due To Evolution; Bizarre 75-Foot-Wide ‘Portal From Hell' Opens Up In Lake In CA; NJ drug bust nets $243K, 100+ lbs. of weed at drug ‘convenience store'; Cockatiel lost for 3 years identified with help from TV theme song; Portable nuclear device missing from stolen vehicle in PA; $2,000 stimulus checks could be coming for people in this state; Teacher Would Rather Be Redeployed to Iraq Than Go Back to a Classroom; Driver Says His Tesla Car Computer Froze at 83 MPH on Freeway; A Man Was Awarded $450,000 Because He Didn't Want a Birthday Party...But His Boss Surprised Him Anyway; Man Accused Of Ruining Pal's Wedding After Sneaking Pizza In For Hungry Guests; Easter Bunny Accidentally Hands Out Condoms at Elementary School. Also, "Pancho" offers his sage wisdom to 2 more people who will "ASK PANCHO" about "Do You Keep The Past A Better Memory?" & "I Don't Want To Go To My Neighborhood Party". We'll also have another round of the "Insane Game Show" where you can play along with "Pancho" to see who can guess better! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/eriklane/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/eriklane/support
Blue Öyster Cult Cultösaurus Erectus With Death Angel's Will Carroll For Michael Butthurt
Mike is in a mood this week because of a hurt ankle, his kid broke his toe and his dog ate a tube of delicious Neosporin. Speaking of hospitals, Darin's wife had surgery and his rabbit almost met an early death.We introduce a new segment this week... Dave's Comedy Corner!All this plus the guys talk about lazy eyes, the Beatles, hitchhikers and fish butts!(It's a good thing we don't pay Quacker the cursing duck by the quack or we'd be in the poorhouse with this one!)Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/irritabledadsyndrome)
IMDB told us this was the third best episode of Kyle XY, so we've got friends of the show Val and Giga joining us to talk about the very Big Episode of S03E08, "The Tell-Tale Heart"! Is it as good as the IMDB score suggests? Kessi shippers certainly think so! Good thing we don't know anyone like that! Anyway, I wonder if Michael Cassidy is a villain or just a cool RA? Sam | Jordan | Val | Gigalithic Twitter | Patreon | Discord | YouTube
Diese Woche war die Preshow so schlecht, dass wir sie rausgelassen haben. Die restliche Sendung war auch nicht weiter spannend, aber dafür reden wir über Darmatmung und den Untergang des deutschen Podcast. Shownotes: Rektalatmung - Einhell - Shell muss CO2 reduzieren - Tesla stellt neuen Genehmigungsantrag - Tesla baut Batterien jetzt anders - Nokia und Daimler legen Kriegsbeil bei - Ghosn muss zahlen - Andi gegen höhere Benzinpreise - Uber muss zahlen - Mehr Schiene in München - Autonomes Kiffen in Amsterdam - Smart Forfour
Utilice nuestro código "PATRIARCAL" en 1xbet: https://tinyurl.com/yfvv4mw5 Siganos en ig: https://www.instagram.com/patriarcalmente_hablando/ Apoyenos en Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/patriarcalmentehablando
Stage 2 is shoot them, then throw a bear trap on them. Red Robin beer shake sounds delicious even though I hate beer. Chinese fighting geese and come fluff my balls.Podcast | Comedy | Straight Garbage Podcast
Oliver (seen the show) and Chris (still confused) react to the fifth episode of Dirk Gently (the Netflix one)!
Hoje, Alê Willer fala de 'Homo Sapiens Erectus', livro de contos de Ulisses Belleigoli, que é escritor, jornalista e psicanalista de Juiz de Fora. Quer mandar sua dica, sugestão ou reclamação? Email: contato@rapidaopodcast.com.br Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rapidaopodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rapidaopodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/rapidaopodcast --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rapidao/message
On the album sleeve of Pithecanthropus Erectus (The Charlie Mingus Jazz Workshop, 1956) Charlie Mingus discusses his methods of composition. There are four pieces on the album: 1. Pithecanthropus Erectus, Charlie Mingus 2. A Foggy Day, George & Ira Gershwin 3. Profile of Jackie, Charlie Mingus 4. Love Chant, Charlie Mingus
Una breve lezione di storia che ci racconta della comparsa dell'homo Erectus o Ergaster circa 1.8 milioni di anni fa nella Rift Valley in Africa orientale.
En este episodio comentamos sobre lo que vamos a traer para próximos episodios. Ademas de comentar nuestras anécdotas de la semana. Erectus es un libro que ambos planeamos leer, pero que Any finalizo mucho antes que Mixtega.Un virus esta atacado la humanidad, cambias drásticos en los seres vivos esta ocurriendo, un científico debe averiguar lo que esta sucediendo antes de que sea demasiado tarde.Enlaces del episodioErectusSuscríbirseApple PodcastSpotifyOvercastCastroRSSSíguenosFacebookInstagramTwitter
https://odioh.wordpress.com/2020/11/08/alberto-bagnai-il-business-as-usual-dellhomo-erectus-diretta-8-novembre-2020/
Elisa se salta el gateo y quiere ponerse ya de pie antes de los ocho meses, lo cual no es nada recomendable, porque le puede causar problemas locomotores.
The Certified Elohim gods Prehistory recorded they came to Earth thousands of years ago, ushered in mankind's first New Age of scientific growth and spiritual enlightenment. By them the civilized hybrid human beings, are created in their image and after their likeness, and civilization flourished all over the Earth. This history is the only authentical apex, or paragon civilized record of the heterosexual species. The uncertified monotheism Christian Bible Adam and Eve Genesis 1 creation fictional story, has no academic validation, by anyone in the realm of human hybrid civilization. The monotheism bible was produced at the Nicene Council at Isnik Turkey, 325 A.D. Anno Domini by the European Caucasoid. This name is denoting, relating to, or belonging to the lighter-complexioned sodomy racial group of humanoid. Which includes the peoples indigenous to Europe the offspring of homo Erectus and later Neanderthal. Why people believe in the bible, is a very critical research.
I feel fortunate to have been able to interview Barbara Marx Hubbard for many reasons, one being that she recently passed away. Barbara has been a visionary to say the least and what makes this interview timely is what she has to say about a new human species that’s emerging. When you consider the fact that we were probably, according to vast amounts of research, genetically modified from homo Erectus to become a slave species, this would be a welcome advancement in our evolution. Maybe, just maybe there's a silver lining to what's going on with the COVID-19, one thing is for sure, we have been forced to go on a Global Sabbatical so we can all start looking at the world we live in and go..."Humm, is this the world I want?"
Leadership is a skill, and it should not be assumed that career progress is measured based on whether someone leads others. Sri discusses the origins of team leadership and promotion criteria.
Es increíble lo que el ligamento nucal y las nalgas han hecho por los seres humanos... Logramos duplicar el tamaño del cerebro cuando empezamos a cazar y accedimos a muchos nutrientes... gracias a las nalgas.
This week the group takes a Halloween themed jaunt through the worlds of Spelljammer, and get in to a skirmish with a Neogi Deathspider above the planet Barovia in Dreadspace. Cast this week includes the return of Henri, plus Du'ran the dwarven druid/barbarian, Tenebrous the aarakocra ranger, and Callisti the tiefling warlock.
The interview starts at 27:40 Justin Giefer of the “The Jindo” youtube channel joins us to chat about ancient mysteries and alternative history. We chat about genetic drift, Homo Erectus, the Crannogs, the seed race, time before the ice age, sea-level rise and hidden cultures. https://twitter.com/thejindo https://twitter.com/justinjg_ https://www.youtube.com/user/skdnmstr/featured The Jindo In the intro, we chat about energy, the poem of the week, the UFO quote and Michael is back in the studio to join us. We also ask for support as usual and thank you so much for listening. See the links for stuff we chatted about during the show and the intro: https://www.grimerica.ca/ep223/ our ep with Bruce Fenton https://www.grimerica.ca/ep288/ our ep with Bruce and Daniella Fenton https://www.grimerica.ca/ep332/ our ep with Randall Carlson Please help support the show…. Grimerica’s DoBeDoBeDo List: Grimerica is fully and solely listener supported. We adhere to the Value for Value model. 0 ads, 0 sponsorships, 0 breaks, 0 portals and links to corporate websites… just many hours of unlimited content for free. Thanks for listening!! https://www.13questionspodcast.com/ Our New Podcast - 13 Questions Join the chat/hangout with a bunch of fellow Grimerican’s www.grimerica.ca/chats 1-403-702-6083Call and leave a voice mail or send us a text Support the show directly http://www.grimerica.ca/support https://www.patreon.com/grimerica GrimericaFM https://s2.radio.co/s053ed3122/listen Check out our next trip/conference/meetup - Contact at the Cabin Leave a review on iTunes and/or Stitcher https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-grimerica-show/id653314424?mt=2# http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-grimerica-show Sign up for our newsletter http://www.grimerica.ca/news Leave a comment, ideas and guest/topic suggestions under any episode or blog http://www.grimerica.ca/ SPAM Graham = and send him your synchronicities, feedback, strange experiences and psychedelic trip reports!! graham@grimerica.com InstaGRAM https://www.instagram.com/the_grimerica_show_podcast/ Tweet Darren https://twitter.com/Grimerica Connect through other platforms: https://www.reddit.com/r/grimerica/ https://gab.ai/Grimerica Purchase swag, with partial proceeds donated to the show www.grimerica.ca/swag Send us a postcard or letter http://www.grimerica.ca/contact/ Thanks to Wayne Darnell for help with the website. http://www.darnelldigitalink.com/ http://www.lostbreadcomic.com/ link to Napolean Duheme's site Felix’s Site sirfelix.bandcamp.com Christmas Carol Video MUSIC Grimerica Theme - Lock & Key Bloom Key - Broke for Free Broke Down Engine Blues - Sir Felix Ortega II
Located in Bulgaria, released 4 albums under Cactus Erectus - Lollicorpse, Popcorps (released on bluff.corps and Suck Puck Records located in Ukraine), Dolores Candle Smooth Funeral, Strange Stories (29.01.2018) - (22.04.2019); Founder of Bluff.corps Records and bluff.corps clothing line. Member of Quite Polite Corpse (breakcore with live drums). Percussionist in Agape (Acoustic Indie). Produce beats as Cactus Erectus also. Featured Song Name: I thing we all might have died back in 2012
A continuation of the story of human evolution, examining some of the later species of Homo that coexisted throughout the ice ages. We look at the later developments of Homo erectus in Asia and meet Homo naledi. Then we focus on the Neanderthals and what we know about their lives, ending with a brief look at several mystery humans like the Denisovans.Transcript: https://riverofhistory.tumblr.com/post/183516695796/episode-8-lost-peoplesLinks and References Mentioned:Acheulean Artwork: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/how-think-neandertal/201504/the-handaxe-enigmaTrinil Shell: http://johnhawks.net/weblog/archaeology/lower/trinil-shell-engraving-2014.htmlGerman Bison Hunt: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/298971814_The_oldest_hominin_butchery_in_European_mid-latitudes_at_the_Jaramillo_site_of_Untermassfeld_Thuringia_GermanyInvalidity of ‘Homo heidelbergensis’: https://nutcrackerman.com/2016/11/09/a-moment-of-silence-for-the-death-of-homo-heidelbergensis/“European phenomenon” by RichardKlein: from the chapter “Hominin Dispersals in the Old World” from The Human Past, Thames & Hudson(2018)Chinese & Korean neanderthals?:https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S004724840800050X& https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0047248499903901Neanderthal Skin, Hair, & Eyecolor: https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2012/03/were-some-neandertals-brown-eyed-girlsNeanderthal Spear-throwing: https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2019/01/neanderthal-spears-threw-pretty-well/581218/Neanderthal Boats?: https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2018/04/neandertals-stone-age-people-may-have-voyaged-mediterraneanPossible Artwork by Neanderthals: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-02357-8Candace Alcorta & RichardSosis, religions: https://richard-sosis.uconn.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/2243/2018/08/2005-Sosis-Special-Issue-on-Religion.pdfDenisovan Skull piece: https://www.sapiens.org/evolution/denisovan-skull-found/
A continuation of the story of human evolution, examining some of the later species of Homo that coexisted throughout the ice ages. We look at the later developments of Homo erectus in Asia and meet Homo naledi. Then we focus on the Neanderthals and what we know about their lives, ending with a brief look at several mystery humans like the Denisovans.Transcript: https://riverofhistory.tumblr.com/post/183516695796/episode-8-lost-peoplesLinks and References Mentioned:Acheulean Artwork: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/how-think-neandertal/201504/the-handaxe-enigmaTrinil Shell: http://johnhawks.net/weblog/archaeology/lower/trinil-shell-engraving-2014.htmlGerman Bison Hunt: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/298971814_The_oldest_hominin_butchery_in_European_mid-latitudes_at_the_Jaramillo_site_of_Untermassfeld_Thuringia_GermanyInvalidity of ‘Homo heidelbergensis’: https://nutcrackerman.com/2016/11/09/a-moment-of-silence-for-the-death-of-homo-heidelbergensis/“European phenomenon” by Richard Klein: from the chapter “Hominin Dispersals in the Old World” from The Human Past, Thames & Hudson (2018)Chinese & Korean neanderthals?: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S004724840800050X & https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0047248499903901Neanderthal Skin, Hair, & Eye color: https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2012/03/were-some-neandertals-brown-eyed-girlsNeanderthal Spear-throwing: https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2019/01/neanderthal-spears-threw-pretty-well/581218/Neanderthal Boats?: https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2018/04/neandertals-stone-age-people-may-have-voyaged-mediterraneanPossible Artwork by Neanderthals: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-02357-8Candace Alcorta & Richard Sosis, religions: https://richard-sosis.uconn.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/2243/2018/08/2005-Sosis-Special-Issue-on-Religion.pdfDenisovan Skull piece: https://www.sapiens.org/evolution/denisovan-skull-found/ Possible Chinese Denisovans: https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/03/ancient-skulls-may-belong-elusive-humans-called-denisovans
We jump around a lot in this one, and that is saying something. We discuss a cosmo article about nicknames for...dudes. Play a round of am i the a-hole, and discuss Tim's operation. Materials discussed:1 - cosmo article2 - "the database"3 - dolphins getting highWant to say something? Contact us at slowmotionminds@gmail.com. Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/slowmotion.minds.7
This episode begins our discussion of human origins and evolution. Backtracking to 66 million years ago, we begin with the history of the primates and lead into the evolution of the hominins (the human lineage) up to 1.2 million years ago. Special topics include the beginnings of bipedal locomotion in apes, the development of stone tool technologies, the use and creation of fire, endurance running, and what we know about the beginnings of language and speech. Transcript: https://riverofhistory.tumblr.com/post/183356510726/episode-7-first-rankLinks and References Mentioned:Linnaeus Quote (English Translation): https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/talk.origins/OaB6xyqyOu0Traits of Anthropoid Primates: https://www.pnas.org/content/107/11/4797.full"Human Nature" and Responses: https://webpages.uncc.edu/~jmarks/pubs/offhumannature.pdfThe Social Brain Hypothesis: http://oxfordre.com/psychology/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190236557.001.0001/acrefore-9780190236557-e-44Plato & Diogenes: https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/animals/miscellany/plato-and-diogenes-debate-featherless-bipedsProposed Hominin Relationships: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rspb.2015.0943Diversity and Age of Hominins: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ajpa.22902Humans Among the Primates: https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/tetrapod-zoology/why-humans-are-important-to-studies-of-primate-diversity/The Domestication of Fire: https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/neanderthal-fire/The Earliest Midwives: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/how-we-do-it/201405/why-midwives-are-needed
This episode begins our discussion of human origins and evolution. Backtracking to 66 million years ago, we begin with the history of the primates and lead into the evolution of the hominins (the human lineage) up to 1.2 million years ago. Special topics include the beginnings of bipedal locomotion in apes, the development of stone tool technologies, the use and creation of fire, endurance running, and what we know about the beginnings of language and speech. Transcript: https://riverofhistory.tumblr.com/post/183356510726/episode-7-first-rankLinks and References Mentioned:Linnaeus Quote (English Translation): https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/talk.origins/OaB6xyqyOu0Traits of Anthropoid Primates: https://www.pnas.org/content/107/11/4797.full"Human Nature" and Responses: https://webpages.uncc.edu/~jmarks/pubs/offhumannature.pdfThe Social Brain Hypothesis: http://oxfordre.com/psychology/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190236557.001.0001/acrefore-9780190236557-e-44Plato & Diogenes: https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/animals/miscellany/plato-and-diogenes-debate-featherless-bipedsProposed Hominin Relationships: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rspb.2015.0943Diversity and Age of Hominins: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ajpa.22902Humans Among the Primates: https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/tetrapod-zoology/why-humans-are-important-to-studies-of-primate-diversity/The Domestication of Fire: https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/neanderthal-fire/The Earliest Midwives: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/how-we-do-it/201405/why-midwives-are-needed
This episode begins our discussion of human origins and evolution. Backtracking to 66 million years ago, we begin with the history of the primates and lead into the evolution of the hominins (the human lineage) up to 1.2 million years ago. Special topics include the beginnings of bipedal locomotion in apes, the development of stone tool technologies, the use and creation of fire, endurance running, and what we know about the beginnings of language and speech. Transcript: https://riverofhistory.tumblr.com/post/183356510726/episode-7-first-rankLinks and References Mentioned:Linnaeus Quote (English Translation): https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/talk.origins/OaB6xyqyOu0Traits of Anthropoid Primates: https://www.pnas.org/content/107/11/4797.full"Human Nature" and Responses: https://webpages.uncc.edu/~jmarks/pubs/offhumannature.pdfThe Social Brain Hypothesis: http://oxfordre.com/psychology/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190236557.001.0001/acrefore-9780190236557-e-44Plato & Diogenes: https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/animals/miscellany/plato-and-diogenes-debate-featherless-bipedsProposed Hominin Relationships: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rspb.2015.0943Diversity and Age of Hominins: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ajpa.22902Humans Among the Primates: https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/tetrapod-zoology/why-humans-are-important-to-studies-of-primate-diversity/The Domestication of Fire: https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/neanderthal-fire/The Earliest Midwives: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/how-we-do-it/201405/why-midwives-are-needed
This episode begins our discussion of human origins and evolution. Backtracking to 66 million years ago, we begin with the history of the primates and lead into the evolution of the hominins (the human lineage) up to 1.2 million years ago. Special topics include the beginnings of bipedal locomotion in apes, the development of stone tool technologies, the use and creation of fire, endurance running, and what we know about the beginnings of language and speech. Transcript: https://riverofhistory.tumblr.com/post/183356510726/episode-7-first-rankLinks and References Mentioned:Linnaeus Quote (English Translation): https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/talk.origins/OaB6xyqyOu0Traits of Anthropoid Primates: https://www.pnas.org/content/107/11/4797.full"Human Nature" and Responses: https://webpages.uncc.edu/~jmarks/pubs/offhumannature.pdfThe Social Brain Hypothesis: http://oxfordre.com/psychology/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190236557.001.0001/acrefore-9780190236557-e-44Plato & Diogenes: https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/animals/miscellany/plato-and-diogenes-debate-featherless-bipedsProposed Hominin Relationships: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rspb.2015.0943Diversity and Age of Hominins: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ajpa.22902Humans Among the Primates: https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/tetrapod-zoology/why-humans-are-important-to-studies-of-primate-diversity/The Domestication of Fire: https://www.sapiens.org/archaeology/neanderthal-fire/The Earliest Midwives: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/how-we-do-it/201405/why-midwives-are-needed
Durée : 2:02 - Un thriller pour ce week-end : Lucienne Chapé vous recommande Erectus, de Xavier Müller (XO Editions).
Surprise bitches, bet you’d thought you’d seen the last of us! Finally, we are up to date and posting weekly! For this week’s episode Cory shares the legend of the mysterious cryptid know as the Mothman, and this story has it all: bird-men, abandoned factories, UFOs, Indian curses, the Men in Black etc… it gets crazy! Then, Chana shares the story of the Mad Butcher who stalked the shores of lake Erie killing, dismembering and beheading an estimated few dozen people! So sit down, light some candles and prepare yourself for a spook filled hour! Once it's done, don't forget to ask yourself... Anyways, How's Your Sex Life? FOLLOW US BELOW: gmail: ahyslpodcast@gmail.comfacebook/ twitter: @ahyslpodcastinstagram: @anywayshowsyoursexlife Intro music supplied by Ross Bugden - you can follow his youtube account here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQKGLOK2FqmVgVwYferltKQ
Todd reveals the reason he hates himself. The cops get too close. Rick becomes ever more enamored of this quirky show.
Esta frase se hizo famosa con el libro de Christopher McDougall del mismo nombre. Aunque si nos comparamos en velocidad con otros mamíferos damos pena. Usain Bolt, el hombre que más rápido ha corrido jamás, lo hizo a menos de 40km/h durante menos de 10", un león cualquiera va al doble de velocidad durante 4 minutos. Somos lentos, pero resistentes. Somos los peores corredores de velocidad entre los mamíferos, pero los mejores corredores de fondo. Ya vimos algunas adaptaciones en 104. Nacidos para caminar... y para correr (parte I), como piernas más largas y fuertes, un talón más robusto, mayor altura para disipar el calor y la pequeña maravilla de ingeniería para mantener la humedad que es nuestra nariz. Pero hay adaptaciones más específicas que nuestros antepasados, anteriores a H. Erectus, no tenían. Vamos a verlas. Adaptaciones para correr Partimos de la base de que son adaptaciones que aparecieron en nuestro antepasado Homo Erectus (el siguiente eslabón después de Australopithecus) y que a día de hoy persisten en nosotros. (Si no tienes muy claro tanto nombre raro y te apetece saber un poco más sobre nuestra historia evolutiva echa un vistazo a 89. El viaje evolutivo: del simio al Homo Sapiens). Tenemos que tener en cuenta que algunas de estas adaptaciones tienen que ver con soportar mejor el calor, dado que se produjeron en la cálida sabana africana. Cabeza Empecemos de arriba para abajo. Podríamos pensar que las adaptaciones para correr sólo las encontraremos en las piernas, pero en nuestro cuerpo unas partes repercuten a otras y en el caso del impacto producido por la carrera esto se magnifica, lo que dio como resultado una cabeza más estable y unos órganos del equilibrio preparados para el nuevo reto de la carrera. Al caminar (y correr) erguidos nuestro cuello pasó a estar unido a la base el cráneo y cuando corremos no podemos estirar y flexionar el cuello para estabilizar la cabeza como hace nuestro perro o cualquier cuadrúpedo. En cambio, nos adaptamos agrandando nuestros órganos del equilibrio en el oído que hacen que se compensen estos movimientos para que no ver movido. Algo así como lo que pasa cuando queremos grabar con el móvil y vamos corriendo, que la cámara no es capaz de corregir esos botes (aunque esto también va evolucionando :-) ). La siguiente adaptación que ayudó a la estabilidad de la cabeza fue el ligamento nucal, una especie de tensor que va desde la parte trasera de la cabeza a los brazos y que apareció en los primeros homo. Un culo más robusto ¿Sabes cuál es el músculo más grande de nuestro cuerpo? El glúteo mayor, lo que viene siendo el culito. Los antecesores de H. Erectus tenían un glúteo mayor más pequeño. Nosotros activamos este músculos principalmente esprintando, pero se cree que se desarrolló gracias a la carrera de larga distancia ya que los antepasado a H. Erectus también esprintaban y posiblemente más que éste. Además, al caminar apenas activamos el glúteo, es cuando echamos a correr cuando más se activa impidiendo que el tronco se incline hacia delante. Por lo tanto, podríamos decir que uno de los ejercicios que más activan el glúteo mayor es esprintar erguido (como lo hacemos los H. Sapiens). Dedos más cortos Parece ser que tener unos dedos del pie más cortos no hace mucha diferencia al caminar, pero sí que se nota al correr (estudio). Lo que hace suponer que son una adaptación directa para este fin. Sudoración Tenemos una peculiaridad que nos hace diferentes al resto de mamíferos: el gran número de glándulas sudoríparas, que es por dónde sudamos y gracias al sudor nos podemos refrigerar. Los mamíferos suelen tenerlas sólo en las palmas de la mano, aunque también hay otros simios que las tienen por todo el cuerpo, pero en un número mucho menor a nosotros, porque hubo un momento en nuestra evolución que se disparó el número de estas glándulas. Esto va ligado a la pérdida del pelaje en nuestro cuerpo, éste protege también del sol, pero no refrigera,
A lo largo de nuestra evolución desde que vivíamos en los árboles hasta nuestra especie actual, los Homo sapiens, hemos sufrido diferentes adaptaciones. El conjunto de esas adaptaciones que más importancia tuvo fue la que nos permitió desplazarnos largas distancias de manera eficiente, ya sea caminando o a la carrera, haciendo que pudiéramos incluir de forma habitual en nuestra dieta animales cazados por otros, aprovechando la carroña o incluso cazándolos nosotros mismos. Estas adaptaciones para caminar también nos sirvieron para correr. Pero hoy nos centraremos en las primeras. Estos cambios en nuestro cuerpo, que supusieron un cambio totalmente clave en nuestra Historia evolutiva, hizo que podamos decir sin ningún género de dudas que los humanos nacimos para caminar. Vamos a repasar estas adaptaciones clave para así poder entender la importancia de ese ejercicio, esa actividad fuera del entrenamiento, que para nosotros es andar. Adaptaciones para andar Adaptaciones que nos permitieron caminar de manera eficiente largas distancias. También nos ayudaron a correr, pero hay algunas más específicas. Mirando nuestra evolución, hay un gran salto evolutivo, sobre todo biomecánicamente hablando entre el Australopitecus y el Homo erectus. El Australopitecus fue el primer bípedo, el Homo erectus caminaba de forma eficiente. Los primeros pasos bípedos de un homínido. Estos Australopitecus andaron hace unos 3,5 millones de años sobre cenizas volcánicas, llovió y después se cementaron perdurando hasta nuestros días. Antes de continuar, y dejar a un lado tanto nombre técnico, me gustaría apuntar que el primer humano, la primera especie del género Homo, fue el H. Habilis, el primero en fabricar herramientas de piedra, algo intermedio entre ambos, pero nos centraremos en H. Erectus por encontrarse en él las evoluciones para andar desarrolladas forma completa. (Si quieres ampliar información sobre este tema echa un vistazo a 89. El viaje evolutivo del simio al Homo sapiens) Más que centrarnos en que si cierta adaptación aparece en una especie u otra, lo importante de todo esto, es que llevamos caminando más de 3,5 millones de años, y haciéndolo de forma eficiente, más de dos. Vamos a ver esas diferencias que nos permitieron a andar más lejos y con menos gasto energético. Piernas más largas Nuestras piernas se alargaron entre un 10 y un 20%. A parte de eso, también pasaron a ser más robustas. Ese esfuerzo extra al que estaban sometidas hizo que aumentara el tamaño de los huesos y las articulaciones. Algo parecido, aunque en otro orden de magnitud, al aumento de densidad ósea que ocurre cuando saltamos a la comba. Pies Dedos del pie más pequeños y arco plantar. Aún no se ha encontrado ningún pie completo de H. erectus, pero se ha deducido a partir de unas huellas de pisadas fosilizadas, en plan estudio de pisada cavernícola :-) Además teníamos el hueso del talón (calcáneo) más grande y robusto, preparado para los pequeños, pero repetidos impactos, de las caminatas. Enfatizo lo de caminatas, porque al correr descalzos (como hacían estos antepasados nuestros) anterrizamos de antepié y no te talón como suele ocurrir al correr con zapatillas amortiguadas. (Más información sobre esto en el artículo: Diferencias de impacto y pisada entre correr descalzos y calzados). Adaptaciones al calor Los cambios que hemos visto en piernas y pies tienen un carácter principalmente biomecánico, pero ahora nos centraremos en la clave: las adaptaciones que nos permitieron andar por la sabana africana de forma más refrigerada. Digo que son clave porque ser capaces de movernos en las horas centrales del día de aquel caluroso hábitat nos ayudó a sobrevivir y no sólo eso, sino a progresar. En la hora de la siesta es mucho menos probable que un león abandone la sombra de la acacia donde está tendido para perseguir a un humano (con mucha menos carne que una cebra). Además tenemos ventaja si nos ponemos a perseguir a una presa durante estas ho...
The Podcastle's tremendous NERD35 rings in another juicy show in late August. Jon and Matt discuss breaking news in Tarzana, the late Jerry Lewis, Statues They SHOULD Have Built, The Terminal and other films people don't watch anymore, true meaning behind bizarre phrases, Sports With Jon, and more!.
Interview Starts 34:05 Bruce Fenton, author of The Forgotten Exodus - the Into Africa Theory of Human Evolution joins us for another long uninterrupted chat. He talks about his new book, an accumulation of the latest scientific research into our origins as the human race. Our current mainstream model of “out of Africa” still holds fast - barely - despite the amount of research that contradicts it. Bruce gets into the details of this evidence and we chat about lineages vs species, Homo Erectus - the wanderer, the earliest tool makers, the profound archaeological sites including the lost city of Giants in Equador, the sudden explosion of evolution and how Toba was just about the end of our species. We also get a little deeper into underground migrations, species vs trait evolution, the hobbit’s and the giants, and some recovered artifacts. http://brucefenton.info/into-africa-theory/ In the intro Darren goes on another rant about vaccines and his social media fights.. and Graham reads some listener emails about Hollywood and the polarization of media. See the links below to stuff we chatted about during the show and the intro: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1zZqlSNRo4 The Simpsons Coded Everything… https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h1D2ynASqe4&app=desktop Trump Trackdown ‘the end of the world’ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p3aoH9BpTrI&feature=youtu.be Dr. Stanislaus Burzynski http://www.grimerica.ca/ep212/ David Charles Plate ep... http://www.grimerica.ca/ep222/ Latest ep with Randall Carlson http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/new-evidence-human-activity-north-america-130000-years-ago-180963046/ https://www.nature.com/news/homo-erectus-made-world-s-oldest-doodle-500-000-years-ago-1.16477 https://grahamhancock.com/books/ Please Help support the show. Grimerica’s Honey DoBeDoBeDo List: !! – Grimerica is fully and solely listener supported. We adhere to the Value for Value model. 0 ads, 0 sponsorships, 0 breaks, 0 portals and links to corporate websites… just many hours of unlimited content for free. Thanks for listening!! Join the chat / hangout with a bunch of fellow Grimerican’s http://www.grimerica.ca/hangout Leave a Voicemail http://speakpipe.com/grimerica Leave a review on iTunes and/or Stitcher https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-grimerica-show/id653314424?mt=2# http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/the-grimerica-show Sign up for our newsletter http://www.grimerica.ca/news Leave a comment, ideas and guest/topic suggestions under any episode or blog http://www.grimerica.ca/ SPAM Graham = and send him your synchronicities, feedback, strange experiences and psychedelic trip reports!! graham@grimerica.com InstaGRAM https://www.instagram.com/the_grimerica_show_podcast/ Tweet Darren https://twitter.com/Grimerica Purchase swag, with partial proceeds donated to the show www.grimerica.ca/swag Send us a postcard or letter http://www.grimerica.ca/contact/ Thanks to Wayne Darnell for help with the website. http://www.darnelldigitalink.com/ http://www.lostbreadcomic.com/ link to Napolean Duheme's site MUSIC Grimerica Theme - Lock & Key My Always Mood - Broke for Free
Mingus Erectus, c’est le titre du livre-disque du poète, écrivain et critique de jazz Noël Balen qui vient de paraître…
As Dirk and Todd embark on a hunt for Patrick Springs dark enigmas, Todd reveals a secret of his own. Detectives Estevez and Zimmerfield take big risks as they inch closer to the truth of their missing person's investigation.
Homo hábilis, Austrolophitecus, Erectus... ¿Quiénes son nuestros antepasados? ¿Por qué hemos evolucionado? ¿Cuáles han sido los hitos que nos han definido como especie? Acompáñanos en un larguísimo viaje y descubre cómo vivieron nuestros antepasados durante los últimos millones de años. Canción final: Mentiras (Los amigos invisibles).
Homo hábilis, Austrolophitecus, Erectus... ¿Quiénes son nuestros antepasados? ¿Por qué hemos evolucionado? ¿Cuáles han sido los hitos que nos han definido como especie? Acompáñanos en un larguísimo viaje y descubre cómo vivieron nuestros antepasados durante los últimos millones de años. Canción final: Mentiras (Los amigos invisibles).
Las mejores bromas unicamente en el Panda Show Radio Comunicate A las Lineas Marcando DF: 5524-89-59, 5524-89-66, 5524-90-03 USA: 1-866-606-57-24 PROVINCIA: 01-800-849-50-20
NG 8503Date Found: March 1985Found By: Ngrejeng VillagerLocality: Near Ngrejeng Village, Indonesia Announced: 1994Fossil: Partial mandible (Right side), with M1 and M2. The latter had not yet erupted at time of death.Age: 1.02 - 1.51 million years of agePapers to check out:1994 - Aziz et al - Preliminary report on recentdiscoveries of fossil hominids from the Sangiran area, Java.2005 - Kaifu et al - Hominid mandibular remains from Sangiran (1952-1986) Collection2006 - Kaifu - Advanced dental reduction in Javanese Homo erectus2011 - Wood - Encyclopedia of Human Evolution
NG 8503Date Found: March 1985Found By: Ngrejeng VillagerLocality: Near Ngrejeng Village, Indonesia Announced: 1994Fossil: Partial mandible (Right side), with M1 and M2. The latter had not yet erupted at time of death.Age: 1.02 - 1.51 million years of agePapers to check out:1994 - Aziz et al - Preliminary report on recentdiscoveries of fossil hominids from the Sangiran area, Java.2005 - Kaifu et al - Hominid mandibular remains from Sangiran (1952-1986) Collection2006 - Kaifu - Advanced dental reduction in Javanese Homo erectus2011 - Wood - Encyclopedia of Human Evolution
KNM ER 992 (Kenya National Museum - East Rudolf 992)Comprised of: MandibleAge: 1.52 million years of ageStage of Growth: JuvenileReferences1975 - Mazak & Groves - An approach to the taxonomy of the Hominidae - Gracile Villafranchian Hominids of Africa1973 - Leakey & Wood - New evidence of the genus Homo from East Rudolf, Kenya2003 - White et al - Pleistocene Homo sapiens from Middle Awash, Ethiopia2011 - Wood - Encyclopedia of Human Evolution2013 - Spoor - Palaeoanthropology: Small-brained, big mouthedWant to support the Reframed Origins Podcast?Visit Patreon and donate what you can to this work:https://www.patreon.com/cennathis?u=583944Subscribe to the podcast on itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/reframed-origins/id964666622?mt=2or every other device: http://www.spreaker.com/show/1372883/episodes/feed
KNM ER 992 (Kenya National Museum - East Rudolf 992)Comprised of: MandibleAge: 1.52 million years of ageStage of Growth: JuvenileReferences1975 - Mazak & Groves - An approach to the taxonomy of the Hominidae - Gracile Villafranchian Hominids of Africa1973 - Leakey & Wood - New evidence of the genus Homo from East Rudolf, Kenya2003 - White et al - Pleistocene Homo sapiens from Middle Awash, Ethiopia2011 - Wood - Encyclopedia of Human Evolution2013 - Spoor - Palaeoanthropology: Small-brained, big mouthedWant to support the Reframed Origins Podcast?Visit Patreon and donate what you can to this work:https://www.patreon.com/cennathis?u=583944Subscribe to the podcast on itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/reframed-origins/id964666622?mt=2or every other device: http://www.spreaker.com/show/1372883/episodes/feed
Our last show before we head to Vegas! PLEASE join us on pride48.com Saturday September 20th at 1:05 EST as Taffy and Taffy talk over Rodan as he tries to tell stories about Atlanta traffic.
In this episode, Anthropologist Dr. Sasha Lessin describes how Nibiru, a rouge planet entered the inner solar system 4 billion and again 3.9 billion years ago, crashed into the proto-Earth, which the Sumerians called Tiamat. The waters and the evolving lifeforms of Nibiru and Tiamat mixed and evolved together. Nibiru knocked Tiamat, the very watery Proto-Earth, out of its position between Mars and Jupiter and into its present position between Mars and Venus. The collisions gouged out the pacific basin, which filled with water, while the surviving landmass moved to the other side of the planet. The other, shattered half of Tiamat scattered as rocks into the asteroid belt, between Mars and Jupiter, where Tiamat and its moon had been. The collisions also scattered waters scattered all over the inner solar system planets. Much of the water froze into the comets of the Kuiper and Oort Belts. When Nibiran goldminers came to Earth and needed mine slaves, their geneticists could, because of the combined life-filled waters shared by Earth and Nibiru, combine their genes with those of the humans who'd devolved from prior human settlers on Earth. 300,000, after the Nibirans failed to breed mine slaves with Erectus females, the Nibirans created Homo Neanderthalensis, combining a combination of surrogates and test-tube fertilizations, and eventually, by intercourse among the hybrids. 200,000 years, the Nibirans kept breeding with the Earthlings and created superior humans, whom the Nibiran Commander condemned to drown in the Deluge, 13,000 years ago, but whom the Scientist saved. The Commander let us Earthlings repopulate, worship Nibirans as gods and had the descendants of Noah rule for them. The Nibirans pitted their human armies against each other and, after the Commander ordered Sinai nuked and fallout wiped out Sumer, most Nibirans left Earth. But they left their observers and left Earth in charge of the power elite, who rule us to this day. Janet interviews T., a multiple-abductee who witnessed the cooperation of the U.S. military and ETs. Listen carefully to this program and its predecessors, and the matrix that enslaves us will start to dissolve. What you learn on this program will free us from the slave mentality that's turned our paradise to a hell. Advertise on Renegade Talk click the link for more Info http://renegadetalk.fm/Donations.html Thank You Renegade Nation Richie and Marla
Bill (director) and Bill (cinematographer) cast the lead role for "Raptor Quest" marking the last day of pre-production! Raptor Quest - Video Blog #13 "Mulcrone Erectus"