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(İng. human)

Göndermeler

Diğer

As innovations accumulated, especially in the West, the result was a qualitative change in the level and kind of human social organization. This shift he likens to that which civilization underwent at Sumer in the emergence of agrarianate citied life. It was this new cultural attitude, and not industrialization, which was the hallmark of the modern age. (Denmark, he explains, is indubitably modern, yet predominantly agricultural.)[1]
Although the region of the Levant which became known as Phoenicia has a long history of human occupation which dates back at least as far as the tenth millennium BCE, scholars are generally of the opinion that it was during the Early Iron Age, in around 1200 BCE , that the Phoenicians first emerged as a distinct cultural entity.[2]
This paper argues for a much greater antiquity of human language than has normally been assumed in the language sciences.[3]

Notlar

  1. Burke III, Edmund (2002). "Introduction: Marshall G. S. Hodgson and world history". MARSHALL G. S. HODGSON Rethinking world history içinde. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. s. xx.
  2. Woolmer, Mark (2002). A Short History of the Phoenicians. London, New York: I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. s. 22.
  3. Dediu, Dan and Stephen C. Levinson (2013). "On the antiquity of language: The reinterpretation of Neandertal linguistic capacities and its consequences". in Frontiers in Language Sciences, 4: 397. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00397. s. 1.