Technology, Culture, & Destiny

Similar documents
Student s Name: Period: The Dawn of Humans

Warm-up. Need Note Books. Sit where you want. List 4 tools used by modern man. What effect does each have on humanity?

3D Printing in Evolution

Warm Up. 1. List things that an outsider would find in your trashcan if they were to look through it. 2. What does your trash say about you??

Students are also encouraged to approach all readings, discussions, lectures, and audio-visual materials critically.

The Neanderthals. Early Humans Review Game Chapter 4, Lesson 1-21 (pg ) Round One. Here we go

THE STONE AGE. The stone age is divided into : Paleolithic( old stone ) Neolithic( new stone ).

Human Evolution and the origins of symbolic thought, culture, and spirituality

What is History? Why study it and why should we care?

T O B E H U M A N? Exhibition Research Education

AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF THEIR CULTURES. Figure 7-1 The Early Evolution of the Genus Homo

Magalousis 2014 Kurzweil Assignment for Ch. 2: The Evolution of Humanity and Culture Name

Unit 2: Paleolithic Era to Agricultural Revolution

Chapter 1: Before History Due: Friday, August 21, 2015

Our Origins Discovering Physical Anthropology

Issues and Methods. Overview 2

Human Origins and the Agricultural Revolution

Anthropology. Teacher Edition. Written by Rebecca Stark Illustrated by Karen Birchak and Nelsy Fontalvo

Next Factor in Drake Equation: f c

6 EARLY HUMANS WHAT MAKES HUMANS DIFFERENT FROM OTHER SPECIES?

Human Evolution. Activity Overview. Essential Questions. Objectives. Introduction. Materials and Resources

Answer all the questions below and turn them in on Tuesday, November 13, 2018.

Year 7 Hist - Early Humans 1

Anthropology 207: Hominid Evolution Fall 2008

FIRST THINGS FIRST Beginnings in History, to 500 B.C.E.

Next Factor in Drake Equation: f c

Bilingüe. Lesson 9. Prehistory

Part II First Hominids to Complex Hunter Gatherers

N = R * f p n e f l f i f c L

ANBI Evolution of the Human Brain Winter Quarter 2013 Monday-Wednesday-Friday 3:00-3:50pm Warren Lecture Hall 2005

A Global History with Sources

The Historian and Pre-History: Vocabulary Terms

CENTRAL TEXAS COLLEGE SYLLABUS FOR ANTH 2301 PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY. Semester Hours Credit: 3 INSTRUCTOR: OFFICE HOURS:

Paleolithic Lifeways

1. Develop knowledge of the fundamental concepts and principles of physical/biological anthropology.

Next Factor in Drake Equation: f c!

MARCH 03, The Hobbit's Brain. Posted by Carl Zimmer

Next Factor in Drake Equation: f c! Cultural Evolution! What is Cultural Evolution?! Example!

Astronomy 330. Exam 2. Outline

Technology. Chapter 1 Technology: A Dynamic, Human System

Neo-evolutionism. Introduction

Wednesday, August 24, 2016 Course Outline

Challenges to understanding human evolution in a religious context

COURSE SYLLABUS (Updated 8/20/2012)

Chapter 2: Human Evolution

Linking climate change and evolution in pre-service science teacher education: What is its' current status? & Where do we need to go?

N = R *! f p! n e! f l! f i! f c! L

Anthropology 391:B1. Winter 2013 HOMINID EVOLUTION Dr. Pamela Willoughby

ARCH 0295: Artifacts in Archaeology: Understanding Material Culture and Ancient Technologies

2-6 Rates, Ratios, and Proportions. Warm Up. Solve each equation. Check your answer. 1. 6x = m = y =18.4 Multiply

Prehistoric Art. Key Notions. -Hand, negative/positive -In the round (ronde-bosse) -Low-relief (bas-relief) -Parietal -Twisted perspective -Venus

Unit #1 Art of the Paleolithic part 2

Science and Technology Studies (STS)

Saturday, September 07, 2013 Course Outline

WS/FCS. Unit Planning Organizer. Settlement patterns Unit Title Caves to Cities. Innovation & Technology Pacing 12 days.

Chapter 1. Prehistory

Essential Question: What was the significance of the Neolithic Revolution?

Big Era One Humans in the Universe. Landscape Teaching Unit 1.2 Human Ancestors in Africa and Beyond 7,000, ,000 Years Ago

COURSE SYLLABUS. Overview

FYE 1000 BIG HISTORY: NATURE AND CULTURE FROM THE BIG BANG TO THE PRESENT SAMPLE LESSON PLAN

ERICH VON DÄNIKEN

Paleolithic Lifeways

Art History Prehistoric Art

HPISD CURRICULUM (SOCIAL STUDIES, WORLD HISTORY)

Science and Technology Studies (STS)

Development Team. Physical/ Biological Anthropology. Anthropology. Principal Investigator. Paper Coordinator. Content Writer.

International Journal of Advancements in Research & Technology, Volume 3, Issue 4, April-2014 ISSN HUMAN EVOLUTION-WE HUMANS, EVOLVED?

Department of Anthropology Fall 2018 Undergraduate Course Descriptions

proof Introduction Human Culture and Space Heritage

PREHISTORIC HUMANITY. The Dawn of Humanity

Anthropology (Grades: 9-10) Social Studies Content Strands

SOCIAL STUDIES Ledyard Public Schools CURRICULUM FOR ANTHROPOLOGY Grades 9-12

UNIVERSITY OF MAIDUGURI Maiduguri, Nigeria CENTRE FOR DISTANCE LEARNING MANAGEMENT

Coalescence time distributions for hypothesis testing -Kapil Rajaraman 498BIN, HW# 2

What is special about human tool use?

The Matrix 9+ Games Generator! The 9+ Games.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Copyright by Luis Daniel Maldonado Fonken, The LDMF Foundation

Dr. Ashish Dutta. Professor, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, INDIA

Reason and imagination are fundamental to problem solving and critical examination of self and others.

AP World History Summer Assignment (2014)

Ancient Worlds Chapter 2. Puzzling Pieces Copy the blue print, it means they are Key Ideas or Key Words

Science as Inquiry UNDERSTANDINGS ABOUT SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY

HUMAN ORIGINS: V New York University Department of Anthropology

AP WORLD HISTORY: John Champe High School Instructors: Ryan Girard and Meredith Bradshaw

Reason and imagination are fundamental to problem solving and critical examination of self and others.

Year 3 - Long-Term Curriculum Plan Overview

2001: A Space Odyssey

Early sea-crossings: Survey and comparison between Homo species

Summer Assignment S P R I T E G Charts: Civilization Analysis

The Evolution Of The Human Head By Daniel E. Lieberman

Cultural Bowls Teacher Resource

Wisconsin Academic Standards Science Grade: 9 - Adopted: 1998

SOCI 101 Principles of Social Organizations

Overview: the ancient world

-To communicate with supernatural forces

Assessment of DU s Natural Science General Education Curriculum: Student Understanding of Evolution Dean Saitta Department of Anthropology

ANTH J Introduction to Physical Anthropology and Archaeology Social Justice Colloquium. Autumn 2014

Foundations of Computing and Communication Lecture 4. The Mechanical Age

Anishinaabensag Biimskowebshkigwag Curriculum Tie-Ins

Chapter 1 BEFORE HISTORY

On Stony Ground: Lithic Technology, Human Evolution, and the Emergence of Culture

Transcription:

Prepared by Bill Hemphill 1 Technology, Culture, & Destiny What Makes Humans Unique? Ability to laugh & smile Ability to lie effectively Cook food Use and manipulate symbols Culture A Definition Acquired knowledge by a social group 3

Prepared by Bill Hemphill 2 Symbols Humans are dependent upon symbols Primates use symbols but do not depend upon them Humans use symbols to adapt to various environments 4 Evolution Two Types Somatic Physical Evolution Physical changes in body structure Extrasomatic Cultural Evolution Methods and Techniques i.e., Technologies 5 Through culture, we do not have to wait for somatic change

Prepared by Bill Hemphill 3 Australopithecine Family (7 types) 5 to 1.2 million years Lower Paleolithic period Ape-man Man Apes 3-4 feet (1-1.3 meters) tall Tool Making capabilities: chopping & pounding tools Ostodontic-caradic (Bone/tooth/horn) 7 Homo Erectus 1.5 million years Africa/Europe/S.E. Asia Sophisticated tool maker/user Acheulean (identified by flaked tools) 8 Homo Erectus First conclusive evidence of: Housing structures Use of fire Cooperative hunting KNM-WT 15000, "Turkana Boy" 9

Prepared by Bill Hemphill 4 Homo Neanderthalensis Europe/Middle East regions Slightly more advanced tool making and usage Different tool types: Bone, tooth, horned, wooden 10 Homo Neanderthalensis Evidence of: Clothing Religion Belief in an afterlife Buried their dead 11 Homo Sapien Major advancements Great diversity of tools Agriculture and domestication of animals Neolithic (new stone age) 12

Prepared by Bill Hemphill 5 High energy usage Homo Sapien Heat (wood, coal, oil, nuclear) Power (animal, water, steam, electric) Transportation (ships, trains, autos, airplanes) 13 Law of Cultural Evolution Culture at large evolves as the amount of energy harnessed per capita per year increases or as the methods of harnessing energy are made more efficient or as both factors work together. Leslie White (Univ. of Michigan) 14 Cultural Materialism Leslie White technological determinist i.e., technology-led theory of social change No one great man theory Individuals are insignificant to cultural change 15

Prepared by Bill Hemphill 6 Technologies Cultural Materialism help to shape and define culture fundamental condition underlying the pattern of social organization. technical developments, are the sole or prime antecedent causes of changes in society from Chandler, D. Technological or Media Determinism 16 Logical Inextricable Cultural Evolution is: Complex or interwoven Stupid 17 Culture: 3 Components Ideological Belief system Social Technological 18

Prepared by Bill Hemphill 7 Role of Ideology Ideology always subordinates technology Example The Ancient Greeks Hero of Alexandria (200 B.C.)» or was it Cestesibus???» Rotary Steam Engine & Temple Door Opening System 19 Hero s Spiritalia seu Pneumatica Sketch of device No. 70 from Greenwood's translation. Sketch of engine for opening templedoors by steam from Greenwood's translation. 20 Ideological systems prevent technological systems from fulfilling their true efficiencies

Prepared by Bill Hemphill 8 Evolution of Cultural Systems Bands» 90% of all the people who ever lived were hunter/gatherers Tribes Chiefdoms States (up to nations) 22 Two Important Points... Culture is manifested symbolic knowledge Artifacts are not culture 23 Outstripping biology Western Cultures Ecological problems & disasters People are surrounded by their own creations The natural environment is alien 24

Prepared by Bill Hemphill 9 Western Cultures Technologically and cultural incestuous Positive feedback system Unstable, prone to extremism 25 Web Links of Interest: Physical Anthropology: http://www2.lib.udel.edu/subj/anth/phys/internet.htm Paleoanthropology Links http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/links.html Hominid Species: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/species.html http://www.he.net/~archaeol/9603/newsbriefs/hominid.html Alternative views to evolution: Creation Science & Intelligent Design http://emporium.turnpike.net/c/cs/index.htm http://www.discovery.org/ http://www.venganza.org/ Technological or Media Determinism by Daniel Chandler http://www.aber.ac.uk/media/documents/tecdet/tecdet.html 26 Content & Image Credits: Information content based in part upon lectures given in June, 1993, by: Dr. Anthony Cavender, ETSU Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology & Dr. John Ephriam, ETSU Department of Technology Hero s Steam Engine and Temple Door Opening Images from: The Growth of the Steam-Engine, Chapter I by R. H. Thurston, AM,CE; http://www.history.rochester.edu/steam/thurston/1878/chapter1.html Hominid images from: Anthropology 1101 HUMAN ORIGINS Website http://www.geocities.com/athens/acropolis/5579/ta.html Australopithecus africanus: http://www.ed.uiuc.edu/students/b-sklar/africanus.html Homo Erectus ( Turkana Boy ) http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/homs/15000.html 27