Conflict layerSloj konfliktov
01 · Deep Humanity
Part 01 · factual history · adaptive resolution

Deep Humanity:
the animal who became symbolic

From roughly 300,000 to 20,000 BCE, humanity is not yet empire, agriculture, writing or state. It is small bands, deep memory, tools, fire, art, kinship, migration, loss — and the slow birth of a symbolic species.

14
A4 history cards
20k
years per card
300k→20k
BCE / approximate
low→high
evidence density
Truth boundary: deep prehistory cannot honestly be written century by century. These cards use responsible inference from fossils, tools, genetics, climate and art. Where evidence is thin, the card says so. This is not myth-making; it is a realistic story built around known anchors and marked uncertainty.
Fast path through Deep Humanity: this chapter is now compressed to 14 stronger 20,000-year cards. Readers who want the densest anchors can jump straight to the high-signal later cards.
Slovenski zgoščeni pogled · SLO

Globoka človeškost

Začetek ni kraljestvo in ni država. Je dolgo obdobje teles, orodij, ognja, jezika, sorodstva in majhnih skupin, ki nosijo človeško prihodnost še brez zgodovine v klasičnem smislu.

MeriloKonflikt ostaja lokalno omejen; moč se še ne more razširiti v imperij.
PrebojSimboli, sodelovanje in učenje ustvarijo prenos med generacijami.
LekcijaČlovek ni bil nikoli samo nasilje ali samo mir. Bil je prilagodljiv sistem pod pritiskom okolja.
To je slovenska zgoščena plast iste strani. Za celotno izvirno besedilo preklopi nazaj na EN; sloj konfliktov spodaj je dvojezičen in se preklaplja na isti strani.

Chapter card map

300,000–280,000 BCE
Bodies like us, not yet history
Early Homo sapiens, African landscapes, survival before writing or remembered names.
280,000–260,000 BCE
Stone, fire, and external memory
Tools and hearths as memory outside the body.
260,000–240,000 BCE
Climate as sculptor
Wet/dry swings, movement pressure, ecological intelligence.
240,000–220,000 BCE
The invisible revolution
Gesture, voice, teaching, trust, betrayal and shared attention.
220,000–200,000 BCE
Continuity under pressure
Small populations, bottlenecks, resilience and the long survival test.
200,000–180,000 BCE
More human in many Africas
Eastern African anchors, regional worlds, no single simple origin.
180,000–160,000 BCE
Herto and the old edge
Fossils, large-animal butchery, sophisticated tools and mortality awareness.
160,000–140,000 BCE
Coasts, food maps, fragile abundance
Shellfish, shorelines, seasonal memory and regional skill.
140,000–120,000 BCE
Warm windows and old roads
Interglacial opportunities, route experiments and uncertain dispersals.
120,000–100,000 BCE
Humans among other humans
Neanderthals, Denisovans, early contact, mixture and rivalry.
100,000–80,000 BCE
Meaning in objects
Pigments, ornaments, marks, fishing tools and identity carried by things.
80,000–60,000 BCE
The narrow gate and the great dispersal
Resilience, symbolic worlds, and durable expansion out of Africa.
60,000–40,000 BCE
Sahul, Eurasia, and the image-making species
Sea crossings, cold worlds, Denisovan/Neanderthal mixture, early visual storytelling.
40,000–20,000 BCE
Relatives fade, ice-age imagination
Neanderthal disappearance, cave art, eyed needles, shelters and Last Glacial Maximum pressure.

A4 cards

Card 01 · Deep Humanity
300,000–280,000 BCE
evidence density: medium

Bodies like us, not yet history

Early Homo sapiens, African landscapes, survival before writing or remembered names.

The book begins before nations, before farms, before temples, before any named person. At this depth of time, early Homo sapiens were already present in Africa. They were not suddenly modern in the full cultural sense, but the biological frame was recognizably ours: a face moving toward modern form, a brain still changing, hands capable of fine work, and bodies built for long movement through unstable landscapes.

Jebel Irhoud in Morocco remains the strongest early anchor for this opening. Its fossils and associated Middle Stone Age tools point to a pan-African emergence rather than one simple birthplace. Humanity did not begin as a single neat line. It began as scattered populations, mixing traits, climates, technologies and survival habits across a continent.

The good: a flexible animal appeared, able to learn, cooperate, remember and adapt. The bad: nothing about that potential guaranteed survival. Early humans were few, fragile, exposed to hunger, injury, predators, childbirth, infection and climate instability. The first human power was not domination. It was staying alive together.

Good
A flexible body-mind package: skilled hands, social learning, endurance, adaptable foraging and expanding symbolic potential.
Bad
No safety net. A dry season, a wound, a failed birth or a broken group could erase continuity.
Deep pattern: Humanity begins as vulnerability plus adaptation, not as mastery.
Bridge: The next card asks how this fragile species kept continuity before writing: through stone, fire, imitation and group memory.
Evidence anchors: S1 S2 S3
Card 02 · Deep Humanity
280,000–260,000 BCE
evidence density: low→medium

Stone, fire, and external memory

Tools and hearths as memory outside the body.

Across these long millennia, most human knowledge left no direct trace. Songs vanished. Gestures vanished. Grandparents vanished. What survives is harder material: stone tools, cut marks, heat-altered objects, and the pattern of repeated skill. Stone remembers hands better than language does.

A tool is not only a sharp edge. It is stored procedure. Someone learned what rock breaks well, where to strike, how to hold the core, how to teach the next hand. Fire did something similar. It extended the day, made some foods safer, warmed the body, guarded night, and gathered attention into circles where stories and planning could thicken.

The good: skill became portable. The bad: technology also sharpened conflict and dependence. A group that lost access to good stone, fuel, water or teaching could fall behind fast. Culture was already becoming a survival system — and survival systems can fail.

Good
Technique could outlive one body through imitation, practice and shared material routines.
Bad
The same intelligence that made tools could make weapons, traps, exclusion and dominance more efficient.
Deep pattern: External memory starts before writing. The first archive is gesture repeated into matter.
Bridge: Once tools and fire help carry continuity, climate becomes the next great selector of which continuities survive.
Evidence anchors: S1 S2
Card 03 · Deep Humanity
260,000–240,000 BCE
evidence density: low

Climate as sculptor

Wet/dry swings, movement pressure, ecological intelligence.

Deep prehistory is not a straight corridor. It is a weather machine. Lakes rise and disappear. Grasslands expand, then retreat. Deserts open and close routes. Animals move, and humans must follow, wait, adapt or die. The human story here is mostly ecological: knowing when to move, when to stay, what to eat, what to avoid, and how to remember a place that may not be the same next generation.

This period cannot be filled honestly with named events. Its importance lies in pressure. Climate instability likely rewarded flexible foragers, social memory, broad diets, tool variation and the ability to read many landscapes rather than specialize too narrowly.

The good: instability trained adaptability. The bad: instability also made life harsh. Groups that seemed secure for generations could be forced into conflict or migration by changes no one controlled. Nature was not background; it was an active author.

Good
Flexible behavior became valuable: broad diets, mobility, memory of water and social sharing across risk.
Bad
Scarcity could turn neighbors into rivals and make children pay for ecological shifts they did not cause.
Deep pattern: Before politics, climate was governance. It constrained choices and rewarded adaptive minds.
Bridge: Repeated environmental pressure makes social coordination more important; the invisible revolution is not one invention, but better minds in groups.
Evidence anchors: S1 S4
Card 04 · Deep Humanity
240,000–220,000 BCE
evidence density: low

The invisible revolution

Gesture, voice, teaching, trust, betrayal and shared attention.

The most important changes in this interval may be almost invisible archaeologically. A better throw leaves no fossil. A better warning call leaves no fossil. A shared rule, a remembered route, a joke, a taboo, a kinship obligation, a healing practice — these shape survival but rarely survive as objects.

Human groups were becoming denser with social information. Children needed long apprenticeship. Adults had to coordinate hunting, gathering, defense, care and mating without written law. The group itself became a thinking system: many eyes, many memories, many fears, many motives.

The good: cooperation made weak bodies powerful. The bad: the same social intelligence enabled manipulation, punishment, exclusion and revenge. Humanity’s moral double edge appears early: the species that can care deeply can also wound deliberately.

Good
Shared attention let groups teach, coordinate, protect children and preserve hard-won ecological knowledge.
Bad
Trust created the possibility of betrayal; social memory could preserve grievance as well as wisdom.
Deep pattern: Human intelligence is social before it is institutional.
Bridge: Once groups carry more memory, continuity itself becomes the problem: how to survive bottlenecks, conflict and scarcity without collapsing.
Evidence anchors: S1
Card 05 · Deep Humanity
220,000–200,000 BCE
evidence density: low

Continuity under pressure

Small populations, bottlenecks, resilience and the long survival test.

A modern reader wants milestones. Deep time often gives something harder: endurance. Many human groups likely lived and disappeared without leaving recognizable evidence. Others carried small improvements forward: a better edge, a remembered plant, a safer camp, a story about danger, a rule about marriage or sharing.

The population size of early Homo sapiens was not civilization-scale. It was scattered, local, exposed. That makes the survival of the lineage remarkable. Humanity passed through a long filter in which most experiments vanished and only some combinations of body, culture and ecology continued.

The good: resilience became a species trait. The bad: resilience was purchased through death, loss and forgetting. Most early human worlds are unrecoverable. We are descended from survivors, but the silence around them is enormous.

Good
The species learned to carry continuity through repeated ecological and social shocks.
Bad
Deep time is full of vanished bands, lost languages, failed routes and dead children who left no archive.
Deep pattern: Survival is selection plus memory. What cannot be remembered must be rediscovered or lost.
Bridge: Around the next intervals, the fossil record gives clearer eastern African anchors and a more visibly human face.
Evidence anchors: S1 S4
Card 06 · Deep Humanity
200,000–180,000 BCE
evidence density: medium

More human in many Africas

Eastern African anchors, regional worlds, no single simple origin.

By this broad window, the human fossil record becomes easier to connect with specific anchors. Omo Kibish in Ethiopia is now dated with a minimum age around 233 thousand years, placing anatomically modern humans deep in eastern Africa. The point is not that one valley “invented” humanity. The point is that Africa contained multiple connected human worlds.

These people lived across deserts, coasts, rivers, savannas, woodlands and highlands. Different ecologies would have favored different knowledge: fish and shellfish here, game tracking there, plant cycles elsewhere, stone sources elsewhere. Humanity was already many local solutions carried by one species.

The good: diversity of environments made human culture more flexible. The bad: regional isolation could also trap groups, create vulnerability, and make contact with strangers dangerous or transformative.

Good
Multiple African landscapes trained multiple ways of being human.
Bad
Local success could become local fragility when climate or neighbors changed.
Deep pattern: There is no single human center. The human story is networked from the beginning.
Bridge: Fossils, tools and butchered animals soon make care, violence and skill easier to glimpse in the record.
Evidence anchors: S4 S1
Card 07 · Deep Humanity
180,000–160,000 BCE
evidence density: medium

Herto and the old edge

Fossils, large-animal butchery, sophisticated tools and mortality awareness.

The Herto fossils in Ethiopia, around 160 thousand years old, make this part of the story more concrete. They show humans close to us, with tools and evidence of large-animal processing nearby. These people were not abstractions. They cut, carried, ate, guarded, feared and taught.

Some Herto remains also suggest postmortem handling of bodies, though interpretation must stay cautious. Even the possibility matters. It hints at attention to the dead: not just disposal, but relation. A human body may have been becoming more than biological remains; it may have become memory, kin, sign, obligation.

The good: technical skill and social meaning deepened. The bad: butchery and mortality stand together. Human life expanded through killing animals, managing danger, and facing death. Culture did not remove brutality; it organized it.

Good
Stone technology, large-game processing and possible mortuary attention show growing technical and symbolic depth.
Bad
Life depended on violence toward animals and constant exposure to death, injury and grief.
Deep pattern: Meaning grows beside mortality. Care for the dead may be one of the first mirrors of personhood.
Bridge: The next card widens from fossils to lifeways: coasts, food maps and fragile abundance.
Evidence anchors: S5 S4
Card 08 · Deep Humanity
160,000–140,000 BCE
evidence density: medium

Coasts, food maps, fragile abundance

Shellfish, shorelines, seasonal memory and regional skill.

In parts of Africa, shorelines offered food that could be gathered with knowledge rather than chased with speed: shellfish, fish, coastal plants, seabirds, stranded animals. The Smithsonian summary notes shellfish use around this broad depth of time. Such lifeways matter because coasts are memory-rich environments: tides, seasons, tools, hazards and routes.

Abundance here was never simple. A coast can feed a group, but it can also disappear under sea-level change or become crowded when inland environments fail. The human advantage was not just finding food; it was remembering rhythms and teaching them.

The good: broader diets and ecological knowledge made survival less dependent on one prey or one landscape. The bad: dependence on local abundance made groups vulnerable when water, coastlines or animal populations shifted.

Good
Diet breadth, coastal knowledge and seasonal memory increased resilience.
Bad
Fragile abundance could become conflict when routes closed or resources thinned.
Deep pattern: A landscape becomes human when it is mapped by shared memory.
Bridge: Warm climate windows and old corridors create chances for movement, but movement does not always become lasting expansion.
Evidence anchors: S1
Card 09 · Deep Humanity
140,000–120,000 BCE
evidence density: low→medium

Warm windows and old roads

Interglacial opportunities, route experiments and uncertain dispersals.

Warmer periods opened routes that colder or drier periods could close. Humans may have pushed beyond familiar ranges in pulses, then retreated, mixed, vanished or left thin traces. This is one reason deep migration history is difficult: expansion is not a single arrow. It is an experiment repeated under changing climate.

The human gift was not only walking. It was social movement: carrying fire, tools, kinship rules, language-like communication, food knowledge and identity into places where old habits did not fully apply. Every successful migration was a test of portability.

The good: humans learned to make home in unfamiliar worlds. The bad: moving into new ecologies could mean starvation, conflict with other humans, disease exposure, or failed adaptation. Expansion was costly before it was triumphant.

Good
Movement widened human possibility and tested whether culture could travel.
Bad
Many dispersals likely failed or left no direct descendants; exploration could kill as easily as save.
Deep pattern: Expansion is not destiny. It is a risky experiment in portable continuity.
Bridge: As humans moved, they entered a world already inhabited by other human forms.
Evidence anchors: S6 S1
Card 10 · Deep Humanity
120,000–100,000 BCE
evidence density: medium

Humans among other humans

Neanderthals, Denisovans, early contact, mixture and rivalry.

By this wide interval, Homo sapiens were not the only humans on Earth. Neanderthals lived across parts of western Eurasia. Denisovans, known mostly through genetics and sparse fossils, were present in Asia. Earlier contacts between lineages may have already occurred, and later genetic evidence shows that contact was not rare enough to be irrelevant.

This matters morally and imaginatively. “Humanity” was once plural. There were other people with tools, bodies, minds, families and survival strategies. When groups met, possibilities included avoidance, violence, imitation, exchange, mating, disease and absorption.

The good: contact could enrich populations and technologies. The bad: contact could also destroy. Our ancestors were not alone in the human family, and the later survival of Homo sapiens came with the disappearance or absorption of close relatives.

Good
Different human lineages exchanged genes and perhaps techniques, widening the biological and cultural story.
Bad
Plural humanity included competition, displacement and eventual loss of other human worlds.
Deep pattern: The word “human” was once a family, not a single surviving branch.
Bridge: Objects now begin to speak more clearly: pigments, beads and marks show identity carried outside the body.
Evidence anchors: S8 S6
Card 11 · Deep Humanity
100,000–80,000 BCE
evidence density: medium

Meaning in objects

Pigments, ornaments, marks, fishing tools and identity carried by things.

Around this depth of time, material culture begins to show symbolic intensity more clearly. Pigments, beads, engraved ochre, special objects and later fishing tools point to minds doing more than immediate survival. Objects could mark identity, memory, beauty, ritual, exchange or group belonging.

Blombos Cave is one of the key anchors slightly later in this broad arc, with engraved ochre around 77–75 thousand years ago. But the deeper point is wider: humans were learning to make things that carried meaning beyond direct utility. A shell or mark could say “we,” “mine,” “this matters,” or “remember.”

The good: symbolic objects increased group identity, long-distance recognition and shared imagination. The bad: symbols can also divide. Once marks define belonging, they can also define outsiders.

Good
Meaning became portable: pigment, ornament and mark allowed identity to travel with the body.
Bad
Symbolic identity can strengthen cooperation inside the group while sharpening exclusion outside it.
Deep pattern: A symbol compresses a social world into matter.
Bridge: The next card enters a narrower gate: survival, possible bottlenecks and the start of the durable planetary dispersal.
Evidence anchors: S10 S1
Card 12 · Deep Humanity
80,000–60,000 BCE
evidence density: medium

The narrow gate and the great dispersal

Resilience, symbolic worlds, and durable expansion out of Africa.

The 80–60 thousand BCE window is one of the great hinges of human history. Some older models emphasized bottlenecks; newer evidence complicates any simple story. But the broad truth holds: by the end of this interval, humans were moving in ways that would become durably planetary.

The expansion out of Africa was not just a population movement. It was a package of bodies, tools, social rules, symbolic habits, ecological knowledge and risk tolerance. Groups could carry a world inside them: not in books, but in memory, language, ornaments, rituals, kinship and technique.

The good: humanity became capable of becoming many-worlded. The bad: the same expansion began the long sequence of ecological shocks, megafaunal pressure, and encounters that would reshape other species and other humans.

Good
Culture became portable enough to survive major movement across continents.
Bad
Expansion increased pressure on ecosystems and other populations, even before states and empires existed.
Deep pattern: A species becomes planetary when memory travels better than habitat.
Bridge: By 60–40 thousand BCE, humans reached Sahul and Eurasian worlds while art and interbreeding entered the record more strongly.
Evidence anchors: S6 S7 S8 S10
Card 13 · Deep Humanity
60,000–40,000 BCE
evidence density: high

Sahul, Eurasia, and the image-making species

Sea crossings, cold worlds, Denisovan/Neanderthal mixture, early visual storytelling.

This card is one of the strongest in deep prehistory. Evidence from Madjedbebe in northern Australia points to human occupation by about 65 thousand years ago, meaning people reached Sahul — the Ice Age continent including Australia and New Guinea — through movement that required coastal skill and sea crossing.

In Eurasia, humans encountered and mixed with Neanderthals and Denisovans. Genetic evidence places major Neanderthal ancestry in non-African humans from interbreeding roughly 47–65 thousand years ago. At the same time, the symbolic record becomes more visible. Indonesian cave art, including very early narrative imagery by at least 51.2 thousand years ago, shows visual storytelling far from Europe.

The good: humans became astonishingly adaptive — sailors, migrants, artists, cold-weather survivors. The bad: expansion accelerated contact, competition and ecological disruption. The image-making species was also a species that could transform every place it entered.

Good
Human culture crossed seas, survived new climates, mixed with other humans and made images that still speak.
Bad
Planetary expansion brought extinction pressure, rivalry and the beginning of irreversible ecological change.
Deep pattern: Art is not decoration after survival. It is part of how survival becomes a world.
Bridge: The next card closes deep humanity with Ice Age intensity: relatives fade, clothing and shelters improve, and imagination deepens under cold pressure.
Evidence anchors: S7 S8 S9 S12
Card 14 · Deep Humanity
40,000–20,000 BCE
evidence density: high

Relatives fade, ice-age imagination

Neanderthal disappearance, cave art, eyed needles, shelters and Last Glacial Maximum pressure.

Between 40 and 20 thousand BCE, the human world becomes visually and emotionally easier for us to recognize. Neanderthals disappear as a distinct population around the earlier part of this window, though part of them remains in living genomes. Cave art, personal ornaments, music-like objects, tailored clothing, shelters and long-distance materials show a species increasingly wrapped in culture.

Eyed needles appear by roughly 40 thousand years ago in some regions, making tight clothing and social display more possible. The Last Glacial Maximum, roughly 26.5–19 thousand years ago, tightened the planet’s cold belt. Survival required not only bodies and tools, but stored memory: where animals moved, how hides were worked, how children were warmed, where groups could gather, when danger was coming.

The good: culture became warmth, identity and imagination. The bad: Ice Age scarcity could intensify conflict, hunger and pressure on animals. Humanity had become deeply creative, but creativity had not abolished suffering.

Good
Clothing, shelter, art, ritual and technical skill made survival possible near the cold edge.
Bad
Cold, scarcity and competition punished failure harshly and likely intensified pressure on animals and rival groups.
Deep pattern: When environment tightens, culture becomes both warmth and weapon.
Bridge: Next: 20,000–10,000 BCE, where climate loosens, coastlines move, megafauna decline, and the road toward agriculture opens.
Evidence anchors: S8 S9 S13 S14 S15

People who shaped this period

Names are scarce or absent in this period, so this section names roles and surviving traces rather than pretending certainty.

Anonymous fire keeperssurvival / culture

kept warmth, cooking, protection, and night conversation alive across deep time.

Anonymous toolmakerstechnology

turned stone, bone, wood, hide, and pigment into external memory for the hand.

Anonymous healerscare

learned plants, wounds, birth, pain, grief, and the fragile social medicine of small groups.

Anonymous storytellerssymbolic mind

carried maps, taboos, ancestors, dangers, humor, and identity before writing existed.

Anonymous mothers and fatherscontinuity

kept children alive through climate swings, hunger, predators, and migration shock.

Anonymous artistsmeaning

left pigments, marks, ornaments, and gestures that show the mind reaching beyond survival.

Anonymous scouts and migrantsplanetary expansion

walked into new ecologies and made humanity a species of many worlds.

Lost rival humansencounter / inheritance

Neanderthal and Denisovan lineages shaped our genes and remind us that sapiens was not alone.

This is a selective memory layer, not a complete ranking. It makes the era personal without turning history into hero worship.

Evidence anchors and source map

These sources anchor the factual spine. The narrative also uses cautious inference about daily life where direct evidence cannot exist. Dates are approximate and may shift as new fossils, genomes and dating methods appear.

S1
Smithsonian Human Origins — Homo sapiens

Homo sapiens in Africa from about 300,000 years ago; climate instability; hunting/gathering; shellfish by 164 ka and fishing tools by 90 ka.

S2
Nature — Jebel Irhoud and pan-African Homo sapiens

Jebel Irhoud fossils dated 315 ± 34 ka; mosaic modern/archaic features; whole-continent emergence model.

S3
Natural History Museum — Oldest Homo sapiens fossils in Morocco

Jebel Irhoud remains and associated stone tools dated roughly 350,000–280,000 years ago; mixed modern and archaic traits.

S4
Nature — Age of Omo I fossils

Omo I minimum age revised to 233 ± 22 ka; Herto commonly around 160–155 ka.

S5
UC Berkeley — Herto skulls and tools

Herto fossils around 160 ka; sophisticated stone technology; butchery of large mammals.

S6
National Geographic Education — Out of Africa

Evidence summary placing durable modern human expansion out of Africa broadly between 60,000 and 90,000 years ago.

S7
Nature — Human occupation of northern Australia by 65 ka

Madjedbebe evidence for human occupation around 65,000 years ago, including stone tools, ochres, reflective additives, and ground-edge axes.

S8
Max Planck Society — Neandertals

Neanderthal DNA in present-day humans outside Africa from interbreeding around 47,000–65,000 years ago; Denisovan ancestry in Papua New Guinea.

S9
Nature — Early modern human genomes and Neanderthal admixture

Modern humans in Europe more than 45 ka; overlap with Neanderthals; Neanderthal disappearance around 40 ka; shared admixture event about 45–49 ka.

S10
Smithsonian — Blombos ocher plaque

Organized markings on ocher plaque from Blombos Cave, South Africa, about 77,000–75,000 years old.

S11
Nature — Rock art from at least 67,800 years ago in Sulawesi

Laser-ablation U-series minimum age of 67.8 ka for a hand stencil in Southeast Sulawesi / Muna Island.

S12
Nature — Narrative cave art in Indonesia by 51,200 years ago

Leang Karampuang narrative composition, at least 51.2 ka; early representational art and visual storytelling.

S13
UNESCO — Chauvet-Pont d’Arc decorated cave

Early pictorial drawings in Chauvet-Pont d’Arc, sealed for millennia and associated with the Aurignacian period.

S14
Science Advances — Paleolithic eyed needles and dress

Eyed needles appear by about 40 ka in Siberia, about 38 ka in the Caucasus, and later in East Asia and Europe.

S15
PNAS — Last Glacial Maximum framing

Uses 26.5–19 ka as the Last Glacial Maximum frame; useful climate boundary for the final cards of this chapter.

Conflict / War Layer · v0.17

Before war: violence without states

This era probably contained violence, revenge, raiding, and group tension, but not yet the large, bureaucratic war systems of later history. Conflict existed as local pressure, not as imperial machinery.

Pred vojno: nasilje brez držav

Ta doba je verjetno vsebovala nasilje, maščevanje, plenjenje in napetosti med skupinami, ne pa še velikih birokratskih vojnih sistemov poznejše zgodovine. Konflikt je obstajal kot lokalni pritisk, ne kot imperialni stroj.

Scale

Mostly interpersonal violence, small-group raids, revenge cycles, and territorial pressure around food, mates, prestige, and safe routes.

Merilo

Pretežno osebno nasilje, manjši napadi, maščevalni krogi ter pritisk za hrano, partnerje, ugled in varne poti.

Evidence pattern

The record is fragmentary: trauma on bones, rare massacre sites, defensive behavior, and ethnographic analogies. Absence of evidence is not evidence of peace.

Vzorec dokazov

Zapis je razdrobljen: poškodbe na kosteh, redka mesta pokolov, obrambno vedenje in etnografske primerjave. Manj dokazov ne pomeni nujno miru.

Why it matters

The key point is not that early humans were peaceful or brutal. It is that conflict was constrained by small scale. The later problem is scale amplification.

Zakaj je pomembno

Bistvo ni, da so bili zgodnji ljudje miroljubni ali brutalni. Bistvo je, da je bil konflikt omejen z majhnim merilom. Poznejši problem je ojačanje merila.

This is a compact conflict layer, not a full military history. It marks where organized violence shaped the era and why it matters for the long arc of human coordination.
To je zgoščen sloj konfliktov, ne celotna vojaška zgodovina. Označi, kje je organizirano nasilje oblikovalo dobo in zakaj je pomembno za dolg lok človeškega usklajevanja.
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