Agriculture
Agriculture is the science of food production. Historically, it places
itself at intermittent periods of intervaled progression throughout the history of humanity. Prior to
agriculture, though, there was no standing or widely accepted means by which to
attain food outside of hunting and foraging. The people of this early period
were referred to as hunter-gatherers, and with that name, they can be
accurately described as persons who would hunt for food where it could be found
and also gather food from where it grew in the wild.
This way of life, though still present today, was followed by the
development of sedentary living. Eventually, humanity came to develop the
capacity to grow food in organized systems. The first systems were the initial developments
of agriculture. They entailed plotting, irrigation, weather forecasting,
planning, and organizing to a great extent, so as to keep pace with the growth
in human population that resulted as a consequence of this new form of life.
Civilizations in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Indus River Valley all began as
human beings started to shift away from nomadic lifestyles into societal
organizations that inevitably led to government and other organized systems of
community. This transition from the wild to the manipulating of different
earthly environments, so as to allow for a different mode of survival, was one
that saw the dawn of modern civilization take shape and bloom into the
sociocultural complexity we see today. In articulating these developments, they
come to stand as innate principalities applicable across an array of modern
knowledges. Wisdom from this time would be viewed as an integral element across
the broad spectrum of behaviors seen at all levels of society. For this reason,
survivalism, in this light, that has perpetuated to the modern day is
consistently characterized as integral and applicable, given the inherent
understanding that whatever the behavior may be, its observance has allowed for
the development and culmination of the modern behavior we see today.
Pursuing wisdom in the throngs of historical examples, such as the
above, is a feat worthy of habit, as the philosophies of early man are wrought
with examples from agriculture that have made their way into the modern day and
continue to show an inherent capacity for profundity and prosperity.
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