tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post4098208289037317060..comments2024-03-14T11:09:32.759-05:00Comments on Falkenblog: Chimps are Status ObsessedEric Falkensteinhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07243687157322033496noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-82337850899711309652013-04-04T09:14:15.585-05:002013-04-04T09:14:15.585-05:00Our business allows us to be strong and weak in bo...Our business allows us to be strong and weak in both ways. A test we should fight in order for us to be a successful businessman. We should be strong all the time. Our strength will show out depending on what experience have gone through.<br /><br /><a href="http://propertyinvestmentsinrealestate.blogspot.com/2013/03/investmentinrealestate.html" rel="nofollow">Real Estate Investment</a>Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10180673075694752041noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-62226226645887689652013-04-04T05:39:01.323-05:002013-04-04T05:39:01.323-05:00@Matthew..
As for the comparison of Native America...@Matthew..<br />As for the comparison of Native Americans to chimps, i believe that the point of article was to display how even today the supposedly modern man shares some basic instincts like envy with our biological cousins(who share 98% of our DNA in any case). It would be totally appropriate to compare some of your/my features with chimps. <br /><br />PS- I use native americans instead of Indians cuz I like to think of myself as an actual Indian :)Akshaynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-40637202350843416452013-04-04T00:04:25.144-05:002013-04-04T00:04:25.144-05:00I'm super glad you compared Aboriginal people ...I'm super glad you compared Aboriginal people to chimps. That seems legit, please continue being gross.<br /><br />Also, your reductive analysis of human evolution is painful to readmatthew.https://www.blogger.com/profile/17785443003038077519noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-71189499960702134982013-04-03T12:21:42.655-05:002013-04-03T12:21:42.655-05:00Humans have not been the same for 50k years: that ...Humans have not been the same for 50k years: that is a politically handy dogma, but it is not true. It is true that approaching 50k years ago is the famous first appearance of representative art, so that sometime on the order of 50k years ago makes a reasonable choice of cutoff date for thinking of hominids as clearly borderline humans. (Before that we can maybe sorta kinda think of them as ridiculously dextrous apes who trained each other throw pointy things and to keep fires going and sometimes to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qafzeh" rel="nofollow">bury each other with grave goods</a>.) But it is not reasonable to think of change since then as unimportant. For a rather tidy example of significant change within the last 10k years, look at lactase persistence. It is a single mutation whose practical effect is fairly easy to understand, and it became common within subpopulations among whom plausibly (even from classic archaeological evidence, before molecular biology techniques were developed) domesticated dairy animals were common.William Newmanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14336821309402794016noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-73707608645956108962013-04-03T07:52:11.448-05:002013-04-03T07:52:11.448-05:00That’s probably the time period when some homo sap...That’s probably the time period when some homo sapiens <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recent_African_origin_of_modern_humans" rel="nofollow">first left the nest</a>.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-10862889062978437552013-04-03T02:58:45.573-05:002013-04-03T02:58:45.573-05:00Not sure why you put the cut-off at 50k years inst...Not sure why you put the cut-off at 50k years instead of anything else. Or why put a cut-off at all. <br /><br />The point is solid though. People of course are more envious than they are greedy.<br />What is greed though, if just a different way of acquiring status?<br /><br />At first thought envy seems more a reaction to greed than the other way around though. So which was first? Non-social animals look quite greedy.spandrellhttp://bloodyshovel.wordpress.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-860180029997916782013-04-02T11:13:13.297-05:002013-04-02T11:13:13.297-05:00“Humans have been genetically same for about 50k y...“Humans have been genetically same for about 50k years,…”<br /><br /><br />Well, maybe within specific contexts such as the innate motivators behind human nature but more broadly this is essentially what the “disparate impact” argument implies. Not sure you can have it both ways here.<br />Mercurynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7905515.post-70018611430837232762013-04-02T07:40:38.150-05:002013-04-02T07:40:38.150-05:00In a world of limited resources, or in a winner-ta...In a world of limited resources, or in a winner-take-all-or-most world, there is little difference between seeking to maximize one's relative wealth and one's absolute wealth. For most of human history -- from the end of the agricultural revolution to the beginning of the industrial, trying to maximize one's own material well-being usually meant doing so relative to the material well-being of others. Even in today's world, there are plenty of zero-sum domains where if you "win", someone else "loses". There are only so many Picassos and Renoirs, only so many square feet of Manhattan real estate: for you to have more, someone else must have less.<br />In any event, it shouldn't be surprising that people focus on relative status: for most of human history and to some extent still today, that's been the simplest way to assess one's absolute wealth compared to how wealthy one could be...Alex Rnoreply@blogger.com