Among most hunter-gatherer groups those making it past the age of 5 live to an average 65 years, the same life expectancy of modern Glasgow. What drags the average life expectancy down is a high infant mortality rate (lots of people dying at 4 is going to make the average age at death much lower). — Isaac
Cite this. — Hanover
Hunter-gatherers do not experience short, nasty, and brutish lives as some earlier scholars have suggested (Vallois 1961). Instead, there appears to be a characteristic life span for Homo sapiens, in that on average, human bodies function well for about seven decades. These seven decades start with high infant mortality rates that rapidly decline through childhood, followed by a period in which mortality remains essentially the same to about 40 years. After this period, mortality rates rise steadily until around 70 years of age (Gurven and Kaplan 2007).
Due largely to high infant mortality from infectious disease, the expected lifespan at birth for hunter-gatherer popula- tions is lower (typically 30s-40s) than developed countries today (8). A common misinterpretation of this observation is to assume that few hunter-gatherers (either today or in the past) live to older ages.
In fact, demographic analyses of small-scale populations show that adult survivorship is similar in some ways to in- dustrialized societies, with adults regularly living into their 60s and 70s and even beyond (5,8,9). Gurven and Kaplan (8), in a review of hunter-gatherer and subsistence farmer mortality data across 12 populations, report that ~60% of newborns in these populations survive to age 15 and ~40% to age 45.
Indeed, the modal age at death for hunter-gatherer populations examined by Gurven and Kaplan (8) is ~72 years (range: 68-78 years), near the value for the US population (85 years) in 2002. Nevertheless, in wealthier nations, improvements in hygiene, diet and health care over the last hundred years have added several decades to life expectancies at birth, relative to those observed in hunter-gatherers
Nevertheless, in wealthier nations, improvements in hygiene, diet and health care over the last hundred years have added several decades to life expectancies at birth, relative to those observed in hunter-gatherers
Several decades is significant. — Hanover
"In the united states as of 2002 the mode age of mortality was 85. In most cases about 30% of of adult deaths occur at ages above the modal age of mortality."
So, as to my post where I proclaimed life industrialized nations would result in a profoundly longer life span, how does anything here disprove that? — Hanover
The point being that privatization and democratic rule have led to great prosperity — Hanover
.. which the figures do not show since every other aspect of hunter-gather lifestyle (aside from neonatal care) seems entirely consistent with a reasonably long and healthy life. — Isaac
I'm still waiting for you to intrinsically link the whole of the capitalist infrastructure to preventing childhood deaths. — Isaac
It's a small number of, very specific factors which cause this problem (mostly medical), not an entire socio-economic structure. — Isaac
But this is the first you've asked that. — Hanover
To support your position, you'd have to show how the entire capitalist infrastructure was, in it's entirety, a necessary factor in improving neonatal care and that such improvements could not possibly have been brought about any other way. — Isaac
I think it has to do with all sorts of things, including medical, all of which are evident in wealthier nations. Capitalism creates wealth and prosperity. — Hanover
I think it''s also the medications keeping people "alive" well past their "use by' dates. — Janus
I think it has to do with all sorts of things, including medical, all of which are evident in wealthier nations. Capitalism creates wealth and prosperity. — Hanover
So now you state that the reason we have increased life expectancies is because of (1) better neo-natal care, (2) antibiotics, and (3) better surgery, yet for some reason that's irrelevant to the analysis of whether industrialized nations are superior to hunter-gatherer ones. — Hanover
as if it shouldn't be fairly obvious that if the better part of your day is spent spearing animals and gathering berries and then nomadically journeying to the next more fertile spot wouldn't lend itself very well to developing the next best MRI machine. — Hanover
Fortunately what we do, including the US, is to take the money and the skills developed due to our superior economic structure and offer assistance to those less advanced nations and we clean their teeth, purify their water, and vaccinate their citizens, not to mention feed them and provide for them in times of drought. It's called caring for the commons.. — Hanover
1. Hunter-gatherer tribes have better dental health than modern Americans.
2. The water is perfectly safe to drink in the wild, it is contaminated by the consequences of development (agriculture, urbanisation and industrialisation)
3. 9 out of the ten most virulent communicable diseases are caused by agriculture. There are no diseases in hunter-gatherer tribes which are treatable with vaccination programmes. — Isaac
1. They have terrible dental health. https://science.sciencemag.org/content/356/6336/362.summary — Hanover
HIV began in the hunter gatherer community. https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn26316-perfect-storm-turned-hiv-from-local-to-global-killer/
There is now effective treatment for that. — Hanover
Yes, the prisoner's dilemma is relevant. — Banno
Do you wish to expand on it? — Banno
Just think about the requirement imposed by some Aryan brotherhood as to prevent any of the prisoners from ratting another out... — Wallows
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