When did humans start to work? Was it work when our ancestors, long ago, spent their days foraging for fruits and nuts? If they weren’t working, then what would we call those actions, that time?
What is the difference between what we now call works of art, and the songs and shouts they would let out as they circled around a fresh kill from a hunt and celebrated wildly while sharing the meat amongst themselves?
We’re taught in school that the introduction of agriculture saved humans from the fear of starvation. As a result of the following stability, culture and art developed. But the opposite may be true. Did people not first feel the fear of starvation from the moment they had obtained enough food to store, even when foraging and hunting? Surely the state of searching for food is nothing to fear, because it’s a natural part of life for living creatures.
Of course, any human being would be confused and fearful if thrown out into the wild with no knowledge of how to find food. But if you had the knowledge and skills to obtain food yourself? No matter where you went, you would have plenty. The Earth itself would be one giant pantry. There would be no groundless anxiety, no meaningless work or labor. Only the fertile time and dynamic life that once nurtured entire civilizations.
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