• @agamemnonymous
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    605 months ago

    Exponential growth. That first 195,000 years was every tribe figuring out super basic stuff we take for granted, then gradually building upon that with other basic stuff we take for granted. Even before agriculture, pottery, metallurgy, herbal medicine, the basic knowledge these were built from took millennia to work out and pass down.

    The real secret sauce was communication. Once tribes started sharing knowledge, suddenly the base of knowledge to built on got higher, and broader. Written language, better means of travel, this sped up the process. Electronic communication has made that knowledge base pretty much universally accessible and combinable.

    Progress is faster when you’re not limited to what your direct tribal ancestors figured out and passed down.

      • @agamemnonymous
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        145 months ago

        Well, my main point was more about cumulative knowledge, but diversity definitely helps too.

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          15 months ago

          Sorry, that seemed like table stakes. The diversity is the exponential growth on top of the cumulative

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      45 months ago

      A lot of that knowledge was also either discovered by accident, or through trial and error. The scientific method is actually quite recent, plus we are now much better at sharing information.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      25 months ago

      Take metallurgy as an example. It’s such a strange concept: There are these very specific rocks that you can put into an unusually hot fire to turn them into this hard, shiny stuff.

      I have no idea how so many different people figured out bronze.