El descubrimiento de la agricultura: el peor error de la historia de la humanidad

El Nvcleo del Alma

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Interesante artículo en mi opinión.

Si hay interés hago un resumen en español con las ideas principales. La razón por la que no lo hago hasta después de ver la primera página de comentarios es porque lo que suele pasar en el foro es que la gente suele comentar para ofrecer justo los mismos argumentos que el texto está especificamente rebatiendo tras leer solamente el título, lo cual significa que no hay interés en discutir la idea del artículo y no tiene sentido tomarse la molestia.

The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race
By Jared Diamond
University of California at Los Angeles Medical School
To science we owe dramatic changes in our smug self-image. Astronomy taught us that our earth isn't the center of the universe but merely one of billions of heavenly bodies. From biology we learned that we weren't specially created by God but evolved along with millions of other species. Now archaeology is demolishing another sacred belief: that human history over the past million years has been a long tale of progress. In particular, recent discoveries suggest that the adoption of agriculture, supposedly our most decisive step toward a better life, was in many ways a catastrophe from which we have never recovered. With agriculture came the gross social and sensual inequality, the disease and despotism, that curse our existence.

At first, the evidence against this revisionist interpretation will strike twentieth century Americans as irrefutable. We're better off in almost every respect than people of the Middle Ages, who in turn had it easier than cavemen, who in turn were better off than apes. Just count our advantages. We enjoy the most abundant and varied foods, the best tools and material goods, some of the longest and healthiest lives, in history. Most of us are safe from starvation and predators. We get our energy from oil and machines, not from our sweat. What neo-Luddite among us would trade his life for that of a medieval peasant, a caveman, or an ape?

For most of our history we supported ourselves by hunting and gathering: we hunted wild animals and foraged for wild plants. It's a life that philosophers have traditionally regarded as nasty, brutish, and short. Since no food is grown and little is stored, there is (in this view) no respite from the struggle that starts anew each day to find wild foods and avoid starving. Our escape from this misery was facilitated only 10,000 years ago, when in different parts of the world people began to domesticate plants and animals. The agricultural revolution spread until today it's nearly universal and few tribes of hunter-gatherers survive.

From the progressivist perspective on which I was brought up, to ask "Why did almost all our hunter-gatherer ancestors adopt agriculture?" is silly. Of course they adopted it because agriculture is an efficient way to get more food for less work. Planted crops yield far more tons per acre than roots and berries. Just imagine a band of savages, exhausted from searching for nuts or chasing wild animals, suddenly grazing for the first time at a fruit-laden orchard or a pasture full of sheep. How many milliseconds do you think it would take them to appreciate the advantages of agriculture?

The progressivist party line sometimes even goes so far as to credit agriculture with the remarkable flowering of art that has taken place over the past few thousand years. Since crops can be stored, and since it takes less time to pick food from a garden than to find it in the wild, agriculture gave us free time that hunter-gatherers never had. Thus it was agriculture that enabled us to build the Parthenon and compose the B-minor Mass.

While the case for the progressivist view seems overwhelming, it's hard to prove. How do you show that the lives of people 10,000 years ago got better when they abandoned hunting and gathering for farming? Until recently, archaeologists had to resort to indirect tests, whose results (surprisingly) failed to support the progressivist view. Here's one example of an indirect test: Are twentieth century hunter-gatherers really worse off than farmers? Scattered throughout the world, several dozen groups of so-called primitive people, like the Kalahari bushmen, continue to support themselves that way. It turns out that these people have plenty of leisure time, sleep a good deal, and work less hard than their farming neighbors. For instance, the average time devoted each week to obtaining food is only 12 to 19 hours for one group of Bushmen, 14 hours or less for the Hadza nomads of Tanzania. One Bushman, when asked why he hadn't emulated neighboring tribes by adopting agriculture, replied, "Why should we, when there are so many mongongo nuts in the world?"

While farmers concentrate on high-carbohydrate crops like rice and potatoes, the mix of wild plants and animals in the diets of surviving hunter-gatherers provides more protein and a bettter balance of other nutrients. In one study, the Bushmen's average daily food intake (during a month when food was plentiful) was 2,140 calories and 93 grams of protein, considerably greater than the recommended daily allowance for people of their size. It's almost inconceivable that Bushmen, who eat 75 or so wild plants, could die of starvation the way hundreds of thousands of Irish farmers and their families did during the potato famine of the 1840s.

So the lives of at least the surviving hunter-gatherers aren't nasty and brutish, even though farmes have pushed them into some of the world's worst real estate. But modern hunter-gatherer societies that have rubbed shoulders with farming societies for thousands of years don't tell us about conditions before the agricultural revolution. The progressivist view is really making a claim about the distant past: that the lives of primitive people improved when they switched from gathering to farming. Archaeologists can date that switch by distinguishing remains of wild plants and animals from those of domesticated ones in prehistoric garbage dumps.

How can one deduce the health of the prehistoric garbage makers, and thereby directly test the progressivist view? That question has become answerable only in recent years, in part through the newly emerging techniques of paleopathology, the study of signs of disease in the remains of ancient peoples.

In some lucky situations, the paleopathologist has almost as much material to study as a pathologist today. For example, archaeologists in the Chilean deserts found well preserved mummies whose medical conditions at time of death could be determined by autopsy (Discover, October). And feces of long-dead Indians who lived in dry caves in Nevada remain sufficiently well preserved to be examined for hookworm and other parasites.

Usually the only human remains available for study are skeletons, but they permit a surprising number of deductions. To begin with, a skeleton reveals its owner's sex, weight, and approximate age. In the few cases where there are many skeletons, one can construct mortality tables like the ones life insurance companies use to calculate expected life span and risk of death at any given age. Paleopathologists can also calculate growth rates by measuring bones of people of different ages, examine teeth for enamel defects (signs of childhood malnutrition), and recognize scars left on bones by anemia, tuberculosis, leprosy, and other diseases.

One straight forward example of what paleopathologists have learned from skeletons concerns historical changes in height. Skeletons from Greece and Turkey show that the average height of hunger-gatherers toward the end of the ice ages was a generous 5' 9'' for men, 5' 5'' for women. With the adoption of agriculture, height crashed, and by 3000 B. C. had reached a low of only 5' 3'' for men, 5' for women. By classical times heights were very slowly on the rise again, but modern Greeks and Turks have still not regained the average height of their distant ancestors.

Another example of paleopathology at work is the study of Indian skeletons from burial mounds in the Illinois and Ohio river valleys. At Dickson Mounds, located near the confluence of the Spoon and Illinois rivers, archaeologists have excavated some 800 skeletons that paint a picture of the health changes that occurred when a hunter-gatherer culture gave way to intensive maize farming around A. D. 1150. Studies by George Armelagos and his colleagues then at the University of Massachusetts show these early farmers paid a price for their new-found livelihood. Compared to the hunter-gatherers who preceded them, the farmers had a nearly 50 per cent increase in enamel defects indicative of malnutrition, a fourfold increase in iron-deficiency anemia (evidenced by a bone condition called porotic hyperostosis), a theefold rise in bone lesions reflecting infectious disease in general, and an increase in degenerative conditions of the spine, probably reflecting a lot of hard physical labor. "Life expectancy at birth in the pre-agricultural community was bout twenty-six years," says Armelagos, "but in the post-agricultural community it was nineteen years. So these episodes of nutritional stress and infectious disease were seriously affecting their ability to survive."

The evidence suggests that the Indians at Dickson Mounds, like many other primitive peoples, took up farming not by choice but from necessity in order to feed their constantly growing numbers. "I don't think most hunger-gatherers farmed until they had to, and when they switched to farming they traded quality for quantity," says Mark Cohen of the State University of New York at Plattsburgh, co-editor with Armelagos, of one of the seminal books in the field, Paleopathology at the Origins of Agriculture. "When I first started making that argument ten years ago, not many people agreed with me. Now it's become a respectable, albeit controversial, side of the debate."

There are at least three sets of reasons to explain the findings that agriculture was bad for health. First, hunter-gatherers enjoyed a varied diet, while early fanners obtained most of their food from one or a few starchy crops. The farmers gained cheap calories at the cost of poor nutrition, (today just three high-carbohydrate plants -- wheat, rice, and corn -- provide the bulk of the calories consumed by the human species, yet each one is deficient in certain vitamins or amino acids essential to life.) Second, because of dependence on a limited number of crops, farmers ran the risk of starvation if one crop failed. Finally, the mere fact that agriculture encouraged people to clump together in crowded societies, many of which then carried on trade with other crowded societies, led to the spread of parasites and infectious disease. (Some archaeologists think it was the crowding, rather than agriculture, that promoted disease, but this is a chicken-and-egg argument, because crowding encourages agriculture and vice versa.) Epidemics couldn't take hold when populations were scattered in small bands that constantly shifted camp. Tuberculosis and diarrheal disease had to await the rise of farming, measles and bubonic plague the appearnce of large cities.

Besides malnutrition, starvation, and epidemic diseases, farming helped bring another curse upon humanity: deep class divisions. Hunter-gatherers have little or no stored food, and no concentrated food sources, like an orchard or a herd of cows: they live off the wild plants and animals they obtain each day. Therefore, there can be no kings, no class of social parasites who grow fat on food seized from others. Only in a farming population could a healthy, non-producing elite set itself above the disease-ridden masses. Skeletons from Greek tombs at Mycenae c. 1500 B. C. suggest that royals enjoyed a better diet than commoners, since the royal skeletons were two or three inches taller and had better teeth (on the average, one instead of six cavities or missing teeth). Among Chilean mummies from c. A. D. 1000, the elite were distinguished not only by ornaments and gold hair clips but also by a fourfold lower rate of bone lesions caused by disease.

Similar contrasts in nutrition and health persist on a global scale today. To people in rich countries like the U. S., it sounds ridiculous to extol the virtues of hunting and gathering. But Americans are an elite, dependent on oil and minerals that must often be imported from countries with poorer health and nutrition. If one could choose between being a peasant farmer in Ethiopia or a bushman gatherer in the Kalahari, which do you think would be the better choice?

Farming may have encouraged inequality between the sexes, as well. Freed from the need to tras*port their babies during a nomadic existence, and under pressure to produce more hands to till the fields, farming women tended to have more frequent pregnancies than their hunter-gatherer counterparts -- with consequent drains on their health. Among the Chilean mummies for example, more women than men had bone lesions from infectious disease.

Women in agricultural societies were sometimes made beasts of burden. In New Guinea farming communities today I often see women staggering under loads of vegetables and firewood while the men walk empty-handed. Once while on a field trip there studying birds, I offered to pay some villagers to carry supplies from an airstrip to my mountain camp. The heaviest item was a 110-pound bag of rice, which I lashed to a pole and assigned to a team of four men to shoulder together. When I eventually caught up with the villagers, the men were carrying light loads, while one small woman weighing less than the bag of rice was bent under it, supporting its weight by a cord across her temples.

As for the claim that agriculture encouraged the flowering of art by providing us with leisure time, modern hunter-gatherers have at least as much free time as do farmers. The whole emphasis on leisure time as a critical factor seems to me misguided. Gorillas have had ample free time to build their own Parthenon, had they wanted to. While post-agricultural technological advances did make new art forms possible and preservation of art easier, great paintings and sculptures were already being produced by hunter-gatherers 15,000 years ago, and were still being produced as recently as the last century by such hunter-gatherers as some Eskimos and the Indians of the Pacific Northwest.

Thus with the advent of agriculture and elite became better off, but most people became worse off. Instead of swallowing the progressivist party line that we chose agriculture because it was good for us, we must ask how we got trapped by it despite its pitfalls.

One answer boils down to the adage "Might makes right." Farming could support many more people than hunting, albeit with a poorer quality of life. (Population densities of hunter-gatherers are rarely over on person per ten square miles, while farmers average 100 times that.) Partly, this is because a field planted entirely in edible crops lets one feed far more mouths than a forest with scattered edible plants. Partly, too, it's because nomadic hunter-gatherers have to keep their children spaced at four-year intervals by infanticide and other means, since a mother must carry her toddler until it's old enough to keep up with the adults. Because farm women don't have that burden, they can and often do bear a child every two years.

As population densities of hunter-gatherers slowly rose at the end of the ice ages, bands had to choose between feeding more mouths by taking the first steps toward agriculture, or else finding ways to limit growth. Some bands chose the former solution, unable to anticipate the evils of farming, and seduced by the tras*ient abundance they enjoyed until population growth caught up with increased food production. Such bands outbred and then drove off or killed the bands that chose to remain hunter-gatherers, because a hundred malnourished farmers can still outfight one healthy hunter. It's not that hunter-gatherers abandoned their life style, but that those sensible enough not to abandon it were forced out of all areas except the ones farmers didn't want.

At this point it's instructive to recall the common complaint that archaeology is a luxury, concerned with the remote past, and offering no lessons for the present. Archaeologists studying the rise of farming have reconstructed a crucial stage at which we made the worst mistake in human history. Forced to choose between limiting population or trying to increase food production, we chose the latter and ended up with starvation, warfare, and tyranny.

Hunter-gatherers practiced the most successful and longest-lasting life style in human history. In contrast, we're still struggling with the mess into which agriculture has tumbled us, and it's unclear whether we can solve it. Suppose that an archaeologist who had visited from outer space were trying to explain human history to his fellow spacelings. He might illustrate the results of his digs by a 24-hour clock on which one hour represents 100,000 years of real past time. If the history of the human race began at midnight, then we would now be almost at the end of our first day. We lived as hunter-gatherers for nearly the whole of that day, from midnight through dawn, noon, and sunset. Finally, at 11:54 p. m. we adopted agriculture. As our second midnight approaches, will the plight of famine-stricken peasants gradually spread to engulf us all? Or will we somehow achieve those seductive blessings that we imagine behind agriculture's glittering facade, and that have so far eluded us?

The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race
 
agriculture, supposedly our most decisive step toward a better life, was in many ways a catastrophe from which we have never recovered. With agriculture came the gross social and sensual inequality, the disease and despotism, that curse our existence.

Algún día, muchos años después de hoy, de entre todos los guanos ansiados de resolver como sea y sólo socialmente la inutilidad real que sienten, de entre todos los hooligans cegados, surgirá alguien que os explicará por qué un macarrón gusta comerlo y una piedra no, si es beneficioso o perjudicial, si sentir atracción por el olor de su cocción es perjudicial, en definitiva si el cuerpo engaña al ser vivo o no, si le da señales erróneas o no, si todo placer es beneficioso o no. Algo tan básico ni habéis empezado a pensarlo. Porque no merecéis poder.
 
Един ден, много години след като днес, сред всички вас шлака, ги е решен като и само социално истински безсмислието, те се чувстват между всички замаскирани хулигани, някой, който ще обясни ли защо macaroon обича да яде го и камъни, независимо дали е полезно или вредно, появяват се чувстват привлечени от миризмата на готвене не е вредноНакратко Ако тялото глупак, че са живи или не, ако ви даде грешен сигнал или не, дали всички удоволствие е полезно. Нещо като основни или ви са започнали да мисля за това. Защото не заслужават да.
 
Y el segundo tomar como ejemplo de salud a las clases más pobres y que menos variedad dietética tenían de las civilizaciones cerealísticas (¿TODAS?).

Pero precisamente la razón de que haya pobres es debido a que la agricultura creó desigualdades. Los pobres trabajan para los ricos. No lo digo como crítica o desde un punto de vista jovenlandesal, sino simplemente como hecho.

Respecto a lo de los carbohidratos, en realidad todos los estudios más recientes apuntan a que no son precisamente buenos. La mejor dieta es la de cazador recolector por definición, tiene que ser a la que se ha adaptado el cuerpo después de haber vivido así el 90% del tiempo de existencia la especie.
 
La agricultura es civilización y avance científico y social.

Los cazadores-recolectores son o eran poco más que chimpancés.
 
La agricultura es civilización y avance científico y social.

Los cazadores-recolectores son o eran poco más que chimpancés.

Agricultura=excedentes de alimentos.

Excedentes de alimentos= sedentarismo, ciudades, tiempo libre, expansión demográfica, escritura, filosofía, arte, leyes, comercio, moneda, estado. Es decir civilización...de 7º de EGB, hoyga.
 
Claro, claro. Lo que mola es andar desnudo por ahí matandomanimales a pedradas y comiendo bayas tóxicas.
 
Claro, claro. Lo que mola es andar desnudo por ahí matandomanimales a pedradas y comiendo bayas tóxicas.

Si todavía fuera a pedradas... se acababa antes. Los animales se mataban siguiendolos durante horas hasta que se cansaban de correr.

Bueno, queda claro que no merece hacer resumen, por suerte somos españoles y nacemos sabiendo de todo :D
 
es totalmente falsa con datos actuales y no con presunciones acerca de lo que comían en el paleolítico (ya puse los enlaces del estado de salud y la longevidad de las sociedades de cazadores recolectores de hace 100 años y antes comparados con las culturas tradicionalmente longevas).

Este tío es propaganda del lobby cárnico, no me extrañaría nada.

Haces trampas poniendo como ejemplos sociedades de cazadores recolectores... del siglo pasado. Éstas son los últimos coletazos, que habitualmente viven en zonas áridas y con condiciones de vida durísimas de por sí.

Yo he oído de estudios que ponen al hombre del Paleolítico, como mucho más sano que el que luego surgió durante la agricultura.

No es tan difícil de entender... tú hablas de la "dieta ideal, con 60% de carbohidratos"... sí, eso serás tú que eres capaz de medir la dosis de cada nutriente y que no te falte ninguno. Ahora ve a la realidad de los agricultores, comiendo bastos derivados de trigo, pan a mogollón, y poquísima carne (tampoco la variedad de vegetales de la que tú hablas).

¿Qué es mejor, comer una dieta basada básicamenet en pan? ¿O comer variado, incluyendo grandes cantidades de carne cazada? Creo que la respuesta es obvia.
 
Tú también pones ejemplos de las personas más desfavorecidas de las culturas agrarias, ponme los ejemplos de las blue zones, por ejemplo, o de civilizaciones como la china o la japones, o la hindú, que hasta el día de hoy comen cuatro tipos de trigo y plantas miles de variedades de frutas.

Lo que es mejor es una dieta variada y con una cantidad moderada o baja de productos animales, esto sí que es fácil de entender.

Lo de grandes cantidades de carne, venga de donde venga, nunca ha dado resultado, se mire por donde se mire.

---------- Post added 01-jul-2014 at 05:20 ----------

Otro apunte, yo me formado en nutrición y sé a ojo de buen cubero lo que como, durante un tiempo si utilicé un programa para saber grosso modo los nutrientes que ingiero.

De todas formas los datos históricos ahí están, no es necesario formarse en nutrición para alcanzar edades avanzadas con salud más que aceptable y no lleno de artritis y encorvado, con las arterias llenas de grasa, desde los 40-50 años, sino antes (caso de los esquimales).

En el caso de que se pueda acceder a un mínimo de variedad en la alimentación, claro.

Si no comes lo suficiente o comes siempre lo mismo, sea lo que sea, vas a enfermar y a vivir poco casi seguro.
Pues no sé qué tal estarán los que pones, pero por ejemplo los japoneses son famosos por tener sus chicas "malas dentaduras" y hacer fetiche de eso.

Y yo no he defendido la paleodieta, ojo. Sólo indicaba que el cazador recolector según tengo entendido estaba más sano que el agricultor medio que fue durante miles de años. Hoy en día podemos tomar una dieta variada, y probablemente mejor y más científica que el del cazador recolector aunque con peor estilo de vida. Que ésa es otra, el estilo de vida...

Por último, hoy en día podríamos trascender la fase de la agricultura y la alimentación variada y alimentarnos básicamente con pastillas. Nestlé está trabajando en sacar unas cápsulas que ya lleven todo lo necesario, similar al nescafé pero para alimentarse, y, en el colmo del refinamiento, adaptado a las necesidades de cada persona.
 
No sé qué huevones le pasa a Jared Diamond con la social and sensual inequality. Desigualdad =/= malo excepto en la mente de progres enfermizos.
 
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