Submitted by Slokkkk t3_11dm4k6 in explainlikeimfive
whereisfatherjack t1_jaa0257 wrote
Reply to comment by GermaneRiposte101 in Eli5: How did people know how long a year was in olden times? by Slokkkk
Less technology
thatthatguy t1_jab9pmu wrote
They knew what was relevant to them. More personal experience kind of knowledge than book larnin’. When your livelihood depends on finding edible plants and tracking animals to hunt you het pretty good at recognizing patterns in the weather and seasons. I might be able to say that there are just under 365.25 days in a solar year. A hunter gatherer will know that when the rains stop you have only a few days to move camp to where the herd likes to come through. But harvest as many of the funny blue berries as you can before you leave because they’ll be gone before you come back.
whereisfatherjack t1_jac04y3 wrote
They recorded and taught book-smarts verbally, through poems and songs
TucsonTacos t1_jaan0o8 wrote
Well both
Edit to say: My bow!
syds t1_jabcfub wrote
and my axe!
panjialang t1_jaboaqt wrote
Dude fuckin nice
Smallpaul t1_jabrm0f wrote
Both. They had neither the content of Wikipedia nor the technology to store it.
whereisfatherjack t1_jac01n1 wrote
They had a lot of the content and they stored it verbally, through songs and poems.
Smallpaul t1_jact4ov wrote
They had a tiny fraction of the content. They didn’t know what an atom was, not a galaxy, nor a continent, a complex number, etc.
They may have had wisdom about how to run their societies, live a good life and live in their local environment, but that is not the same as having vast global knowledge.
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