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History of Technology 6: Emergence of Writing Systems 27 Views
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Description:
It's a good thing writing systems emerged when they did, or you'd never be able to read this video description. Phew. Crisis averted.
Transcript
- 00:02
In this lesson, we're tackling one of the most important human inventions of
- 00:07
all time... the Snuggie. What, it's amazing. Okay, fine, we're actually tackling [guy puts on a Snuggie]
- 00:12
writing, but we're doing it in a Snuggie. Without writing, the complex civilization [person teaches in Snuggie]
- 00:17
we know and love today could not exist. Writing gave us the power to accurately
- 00:22
preserve the past, to exchange information with people we couldn't [hand writes]
Full Transcript
- 00:27
directly speak to, and to create a common body of knowledge that [benefits of writing demonstrated]
- 00:32
was larger than any single individual's brain. Without writing there'd be no
- 00:37
Canterbury Tales, no car manuals, and certainly no super-angry Twitter Wars. [a world without writing]
- 00:43
Actually, that part sounds okay. But seriously, we read every day, from cereal
- 00:48
boxes, to directions on how to make a pizza, to math textbooks. So yep, pretty [people read]
- 00:53
important. And now, for the story of how when and where writing systems first
- 00:57
emerged. Unfortunately, it's complicated. Well [book opens]
- 01:01
there wasn't just some dude who was struck by lightning and ran back to his
- 01:04
village shouting, "Guys, we should carve some letters into clay tablets--it'll be [guy has lightning-fueled epiphany]
- 01:09
awesome." Yeah... Well, like most technology, the invention of writing was a process
- 01:14
that involved lots of people over a long period of time all working to [people write through the ages]
- 01:18
communicate in better ways. But it wasn't isolated in one area. Nope--writing was
- 01:24
developing in different places all over the world. Some might be wondering why [global map of writing]
- 01:29
writing needed to be invented at all. Isn't it just a natural extension of
- 01:33
talking? Well, yes and no. When we see a word on a page, we immediately see what
- 01:38
the word refers to in life. It's like we see the word tiger and we imagine a tiger, [writing symbolism demonstrated]
- 01:44
right? But written language is symbolic. In other words, it uses symbols that, when
- 01:50
combined in different combinations, represent or refer to something in the
- 01:54
real world. So somebody somewhere had to come up with the idea of a series of
- 01:58
symbols that represented spoken language. No pressure or anything. And yes, it took [person draws in sand]
- 02:04
some serious leaps in thought to get all of humanity on the writing bandwagon. [people pushed onto bandwagon]
- 02:09
Introducing new things is never easy, which would explain why the world dress
- 02:13
code still isn't the Snuggie. [everyone wears a Snuggie]
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