Human Hunter: Revisited in 1966, a group of about 50 anthropologists gathered in Chicago, later called the "Hunter" conference. This conference was in stark contrast to early scholarships and presented a Hollywood approach to discussing early human topics. Anthropologist Sherwood L. Washburn and CS Lancaster (1968) attended the conference and said, "Our intelligence, interests, emotions, and basic social life are the products of the evolution of success of adaptive hunting" I insisted.
"Original rich society" is a theory that assumes that hunter-gatherers are the original rich society. This theory was first created by Marshall Salins at the seminar "Hunter" in 1966. The significance of this theory arises from the transformation of its anthropological thinking into a primitive hunter collection society and its role as a practitioner. In an exquisite lifestyle seminar, new research by anthropologists such as Richard B. Lee working in Kung in southern Africa is challenging the general idea that hunter gathering society is always on the brink of hunger I will. Please continue to struggle to survive. . Salins gathered data from these studies and used it to support the comprehensive claim that the hunter gatherer was not deprived but lived in a society "everyone wants people to be satisfied" did.
Among the articles published by American anthropologists in the early 1990s, Li (1992) reflected in his preface what he wrote for Volume DeVore and DeVore published at the "Hunter" conference. At the time they said that the vast majority of people who chose to do outdoor research at the Hunter Hunting Association believed they had their own suffering and tyranny in their own form. Pain with high sensitivity and infant mortality; sharing by persistent harassment self-control and secret threats and extensive harassment and harassment
Dark side of 'The rich society of the original': David Kaplan Sources: Anthropological Research Journal, Vol. 56, No. 3 (autumn 2000), pp. 301-332 Publisher: New Mexico University Stability Website: http: //www.jstor.org/stable/3631086 Access Date: 26/02/2009 19: 59
Sarin's theory has been challenged by many scholars in the field of anthropology and archeology. They argue that hunter-gatherer society is not "rich", but they are affected by high infant mortality rate, frequent illness, and perennial war. This seems to apply not only to historical feeding culture but also to prehistoric and primitive cultures. David Kaplan gathered several questions such as the theory of "primitive rich society", in particular the definition of "wealth", "work", "leisure", nutritionally enough food of hunter gatherer It was. And the occurrence of "demand sharing", constantly sharing pressure as increasing binding force