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The Lost Civilisations of the Stone Age: A Journey Back to Our Cultural Origins
 
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The Lost Civilisations of the Stone Age: A Journey Back to Our Cultural Origins (Hardcover)
by Richard Rudgley (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  (2 customer reviews)

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Secrets of the Stone Age: A Prehistoric Journey with Richard Rudgley

Secrets of the Stone Age: A Prehistoric Journey with Richard Rudgley by Richard Rudgley

5.0 out of 5 stars (1) 
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Product details
  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Century (Sep 1998)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0712677585
  • ISBN-13: 978-0712677585
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 645,189 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)
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Product Description
Amazon.co.uk Review
Our continuing fascination with our own ancestry is probably one of the few attributes left that is considered unique to humans. Although, considering all the effort that has gone into trying to recover information about early humans over the last 200 years, it is remarkable how little we know and how much argument there is over the interpretation of what is known. But the situation is dramatically improving, as English anthropological writer Richard Rudgley shows. As an award-winning professional anthropologist (British Museum Prometheus Award 1991), now based in Oxford's Pitt Rivers Museum, Rudgley is well placed to give an up-to-date overview of the Stone Age for the general reader.

The so-called "Stone Age" (technically called the Palaeolithic, lasting from 2.4 to 10,000 million years ago) inevitably conjures up Flintstone-like images of peoples, what social anthropologists call "idiot communities". Rudgley seeks to alter this misconception, which originated with 19th-century notions of progress and Darwinistic superiority. He argues that the achievements of prehistoric times, ranging from the technicalities of mining and stone tool-making, through surgery and the origins of writing to art, have been downplayed in popular accounts. Recent advances in dating have shown that previous ideas about the chronology of many aspects of Palaeolithic culture were quite erroneous, especially with regard to the art of the period. Art from the earliest phase of the Upper Palaeolithic shows, as Rudgley says, "an equal mastery ... to that of the later phases". Packed with up-to-date information, a useful bibliography and an index, Lost Civilisations shows that a whole range of "prehistoric cultural achievements are more profound, complex and multifarious than has been hitherto suspected". -- Douglas Palmer

Synopsis
This work presents Stone Age civilization as far more sophisticated than previously believed in terms of its technology, mathematics, medicine, communications (which were worldwide) and art. The author attempts to re-establish Rousseau's notion of the "Noble Savage".


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent. Highly recommended read of where we came from., 1 May 2000
I bought this book in spite of the two reviews given here, both of which seemed to be self-serving. I found this book completely fascinating. The orthodox attempt to define 'civilisation' by ridiculously rigid criteria is handled very well in the book. I want to know what is known about our ancestors from 2.5 million years ago until zero BC. I'm not prepared to be bogged down by whether someone thinks these people were or were not 'sapiens', or whether the evidence really constitutes our definition of 'civilisation' or not, because these are simply the limitations we put on our understanding. Having read more widely in paleoanthropology recently, I now realise that the division between home sapiens sapiens and our preceding ancestors is really just a sequence of small steps. I feel far closer to a being that can size up a lump of flint and skillfully chip away to create a hand axe than I do to any chimp. That 'homo erectus' was my great, great....great grandfather and I want to know about him, 'civilised' or not. This book gave me a very comprehensive and balanced account of what evidence there is or may be for early 'man's' activities, and I found it enormously enriching. It was also most refreshing to find an author who always gave the opposing point of view. Excellent.
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0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Has the mystery finally been solved?, 6 Dec 1999
By A Customer
As the sun rises over Colonel Percy Plimmington's English mansion a terrible scream is heard. Sir Percy's maid, Emily has discovered a body in the library. The police are called in and despite their best efforts they cannot make head nor tail of the case. At this point, Sherlock Holmes and his trusty sidekick Dr. Watson arrive on the scene. After a detailed examination, Holmes has Watson assemble the household in the library where the great detective will solve the mystery. Sir Percy and his lovely young wife Mildred arrive, followed by the still shocked maid Emily and Gilbert the Butler who wheels in the crippled Granny Plimmington with her white Persian cat Fluffy sitting contentedly on her lap. There is a deadly silence as everyone looks to Holmes. Sherlock takes in this pregnant pause and then says: &quo