Abaddon
Deity
Native Americans - bison and deer.
Sub-Saharan Africans - giraffes, elephants, rhinos, hippopotamuses, etc.
Australian Aborigines - kangaroos.
How is that proof? linky linky!
Native Americans - bison and deer.
Sub-Saharan Africans - giraffes, elephants, rhinos, hippopotamuses, etc.
Australian Aborigines - kangaroos.
Because the Native Americans succeeded in domesticating some animals for food, showing that they did indeed have the concept of domestication in their culture, but they failed to domesticate others for the same and different purposes, showing that the domestication failed not because of a lack of will but because of a lack of domesticability.Eh, das, please tell me how that collapses my arguement?
of course! But did any warn those that didnt bother?
Yes, but what if you have no concept of it, and they arn't readily available to the point of being easy?
Again, they had no concept the enemy would be riding either.. and I don't think they had time to try once we arrived!![]()
Indeed, but it isn't universal either, nor a majority.
How is that proof? linky linky!
...Good God. Did you seriously read my post? At all? I find this incredibly hard to believe.
If Society A domesticates an animal, then Society A has an advantage over the hunter-gatherer Society B. Thus, Society A will end up dominating.
There were around 100 million people in the Americas prior to contact. To assume that none of them bothered to try domesticating any animals there is lunacy. Since some of them tried, and since none of them succeeded, we can conclude the animals weren't domesticatable.
NO ONE HAD A CONCEPT OF IT! One does not go around and think, hey, that goat over there would look really nice in my pen. But some people ended up with the goat in the pen. Funny that. It's almost as if you don't need a concept of it to do it anyway.
Jesus Christ! I'm not talking about fighting Europeans, as would be patently obvious to anyone who even bothered to read more than half of the words in my post. I'm talking about internecine warfare among Natives.
I guess that's why Guns, Germs, and Steel won a Pulitzer Prize, and a Phi Beta Kappa Award. Yeah, definitely controversial, widely opposed views.![]()
Thinky thinky! Why wouldn't they have domesticated those animals?
But not impossible, because they didn't spend an infinite amount of time actually testing it, right? Man, I'm sure if we just had some people run into walls until the end of time, eventually they'd learn to teleport through! It's not impossible, guys, it just takes an arbitrarily long time!@ Jal~ That merely shows that some animals are more difficult to domesticate than others....
IRRELEVANT, learn to readz, kthnxby.Erm, some things WERE domesticated in NA. Just not the Gruffalo
But not impossible, because they didn't spend an infinite amount of time actually testing it, right? Man, I'm sure if we just had some people run into walls until the end of time, eventually they'd learn to teleport through! It's not impossible, guys, it just takes an arbitrarily long time!
IRRELEVANT, learn to readz, kthnxby.
So in your mind nothing is impossible then? Nothing's just flat out infeasible? Do you talk to Luckymoose often?Or it could be they tried, failed and gave up? I don't see your point here. As I have repeatedly said, it wasn't worth doing, thats why it didn't happen.
No, but we are, even if you aren't, because his point is valid that small domesticates are relatively tangential additions at best vis-a-vis large, complex societies (read: the things NESes concern themselves with), which are based on food and thus, large mammals. Small animals don't replace large animals. They don't "fulfill need."Sorry, but just because he decided to discount by size doesn't mean the rest of the world does.
Erm, some things WERE domesticated in NA. Just not the Gruffalo
Please, don't bat on about me not reading what you write and stop at the AND in my sentances! I said the concept and the ease. You don't need both, but it helps.
Sorry, not a single person has mentioned wars between natives up to this point, but a whole lot about europeans arriving and stuffing things up because they had domesticated more things!
Don't needlessly exaggerate. Thats hardly what I said
Because they couldn't for the amount of effort it was worth expending to achieve?
You make the claim that it is not possible to domesticate an elephant.
You base this on a book stating that elephants used in a case that is often cited for domestication were in fact not.
I accept that elephants have not been domesticated.
What I am arguing that all animals COULD be domesticated if sufficent directives were obtained.
Before the arrival of the Euros.. there was not sufficient need to overcome the difficulties in domesticating the buffalo.
@ Jal~ That merely shows that some animals are more difficult to domesticate than others....
Because they couldn't for the amount of effort it was worth expending to achieve?