originally posted by Jeff Connell:
Would love to read the whole report.
So: "Humans have harnessed yeasts since the dawn of civilisation to make wine."
Was this our first civilized action, or was this the act that first civilized us?
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Jeff Connell:
Would love to read the whole report.
So: "Humans have harnessed yeasts since the dawn of civilisation to make wine."
Was this our first civilized action, or was this the act that first civilized us?
Considering that the oldest known cuneiform tablet is a recipe for making beer, I believe that either side could be effectively argued. Someone (Michael Pollan, perhaps?) has argued that a likely impetus for settling down into communities and farming crops was the desire to make beer. When I get to a stable Internet connection in 5 days, I'll be able to access that Nature article. PM me if you'd like a copy.
Mark Lipton
That's pretty damn funny.originally posted by SFJoe:
Seems like a good argument for, pardon the expression, weed.
originally posted by SFJoe:
No, I'm saying they failed to find cloned S.c. In native ferments.
Sorry, BB won't let me uncap that I.
Considering that the oldest known cuneiform tablet is a recipe for making beer, I believe that either side could be effectively argued.
[...]anthro prof saying that the most current research (including field research with remaining hunter-gatherer groups) indicated that the motive for moving to agriculture was to support a larger population than hunting and gathering was capable of, since no one in his or her right mind would choose agriculture over hunting and gathering as a way to make a living. The alternative earlier theory had reversed cause and effect, arguing that larger populations followed upon the shift to agriculture.
originally posted by wrrntl:
originally posted by SFJoe:
No, I'm saying they failed to find cloned S.c. In native ferments.
Sorry, BB won't let me uncap that I.
hm, can the argument that S.C.'s evolution was a result of human processes and any regional variation is minimal?
No it isn't. The text you are probably referring to is the Hymn to Ninkasi, which gives some idea of what the brewing process was like. It is a 19th C. text - Mesopotamian cuneiform had been a full writing system ( i.e. capable of expressing sounds as opposed to a limited writing system which doesn't convey sounds to the reader but ideas ) for over a thousand years at that point and had several thousand years more history as a limited writing system .
Interesting. So, the agriculture experiment had sufficient motivation behind it for farmers to keep working at it even though it was a long time not productive enough for the hunter-gatherer types to stay home.originally posted by Otto Nieminen:
Nissen also makes the good point that early agriculture was so haphazard that people had to have other means of getting food as well - so farming and hunting and gathering co-existed in the same community for millennia.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Naturally occurring S.C. would, as a result of geographical isolation, almost inevitably radiate into populations with genetic distinctions, as the article abstract notes was the case. Of course, human introduction of S.C. from elsewhere would affect those population groups. But unless the human introduction of a common form was so massive as to decimate, as opposed to change, local populations, distinctions among those populations might change, but they wouldn't necessarily lessen. Of course, if the full article shows overwhelming elision of geographical radiation, I take it all back.
A much more likely cause of change to local populations would occur as a result of human winemaking processes, even "natural ones," in specific regions and localities. For instance, the ripeness of Southern Rhone wines has led to strains of local yeast that can ferment dry above 15%. I don't know if that's occurred elsewhere.
a little task for you. go learn a little about, say, chinese orthography versus, say, english orthography, and get yourself a wider idea of the question of what it means for an orthographic system to convey acoustic information.
then go learn a little about what all this entails for the problem of characterizing representations of "phonology" (our ideas about which, it tuns out, are hopelessly derived from orthographic systems). then ask yourself what all this means for the game of explaining easy shit, like ideas and stuff...
then drink a glass of your chosen poison, and reflect on the fact that the world is a much more wonderful and baffling place than easy interweb generalizing makes it seem sometimes.