Domain Hunter Gatherer |best| [ iPad EXTENDED ]
We spend our lives trying to satisfy an ancient animal with modern toys. And we wonder why we are always hungry.
The practice of looking at the hunter-gatherer is an act of cognitive ecology. When you go for a walk without a phone, you are hunting for sensory peace. When you cook a meal from raw ingredients, you are gathering your own biology. When you sit around a fire with friends, telling stories without a screen, you are rehearsing a ritual older than language. domain hunter gatherer
The hunter-gatherer was not poor. They were optimally poor. They had exactly what they needed and nothing more. As anthropologist Marshall Sahlins famously called it, they lived in "the original affluent society"—not because they had everything, but because they wanted nothing they didn’t have. Consider the size of your inner circle. Dunbar’s number—roughly 150—is the cognitive limit to the number of stable social relationships a human can maintain. This is not a coincidence; it is the size of a typical hunter-gatherer band. Your brain is a tribal organ. Yet you live in a city of millions, interact with thousands of "friends" on a screen, and feel lonelier than a solitary forager in a desert. We spend our lives trying to satisfy an