The Lost Civilizations of the Stone Age Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

The Lost Civilizations of the Stone Age Book

Among historians, one of the most widely accepted criteria for a society's being "civilized" is whether it has a writing system, one that permits complex record keeping and allows for an account of the past. By that measure, writes British museologist Richard Rudgley, many societies of the most ancient Stone Age are to be reckoned as civilizations, for new archaeological evidence suggests that the Neolithic writing systems of cultures like Mesopotamia and the Nile valley have their roots in even older systems, some dating back to the time of the Neanderthals. (Just what those writing systems say remains a matter of debate, and Rudgley acknowledges that "if a script cannot be deciphered, then it will always be possible to dismiss it.") Prehistoric sign systems aside, Rudgley urges that the chronology of human cultural evolution be pushed back well into the Paleolithic; "the most fundamental cultural innovations," he suggests, "actually occurred far earlier in the overall sequence [of human development] than is generally realized." He maintains, for instance, that fired pottery, another characteristic of civilized societies, existed among Siberian nomads some 13,000 years ago, and that a knowledge of metallurgy existed in Egypt 35,000 years ago. Any call for a revision in widely accepted chronologies is, of course, sure to be controversial among prehistorians, and Rudgley's book, well reasoned as it is, will provoke debate. --Gregory McNameeRead More

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  • Product Description

    0ur long-held myths are exploding. Recent discoveries of astonishing accomplishments from the Neolithic Age -- in art, technology, writing, math, science, religion, medicine, and exploration -- demand a fundamental rethinking of human history before the dawn of civilization. As Richard Rudgley puts it, "The prehistory of mankind is no mere prelude to history, rather history is a colorful and eventful afterword to the Stone Age."

    In this fascinating book, Rudgley describes how the intrepid explorers of the Stone Age discovered all of the world's major land masses long before the so-called Age of Discovery. Stone Age man made precisely sized tools, and used proto-abacuses to count and measure. He performed medical operations including amputations and delicate cranial surgeries. Neanderthals not only domesticated fire for heat and light, but experimented with lichen and moss fuels. In the visual arts, the Paleolithic cave artists of western Europe used techniques forgotten until the Renaissance. Picasso himself is said to have remarked after visiting Lascaux, "We have invented nothing!"

    If prehistory makes up 95 percent of our time on the planet, then it stands to reason that early Homo Sapiens would have slowly developed the building blocks of culture and civilization. But the astonishing richness of Stone Age life is in fact a sudden eruption, so powerful that it forces us to wonder whether we have made real progress since then. Rudgley reminds us just how savage so-called civilized peoples can be, and shows us how civilized the cultures were that have been reviled as savage. Prehistoric life expectancy was better than it is for contemporary third-world populations. Care for the sick and weak was a feature of archaic societies. Warfare seems to have been less prevalent in prehistoric days than in our own. The Lost Civilizations of the Stone Age shows the greatness of the debt that contemporary society owes to its prehistoric predecessors. It is a rich introduction to a lost world that will redefine the meaning of civilization itself.

  • 0684855801
  • 9780684855806
  • Richard Rudgley
  • 25 January 1999
  • The Free Press
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 320
  • illustrated edition
  • Illustrated
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