Humans: A Brief History of How We F*cked It All Up Gönderileri
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« Bildiğimiz şey, tarımın ortaya çıkışından kısa bir süre sonra insanlığın eşitsizliği icat ettiğidir. Aferin millet.
Arkeologlar bunu ilk yerleşimlerdeki evlerin boyutlarına bakarak anlayabilirler. Başlangıç olarak aralarında pek bir fark yok. Toplumlar oldukça eşitlikçi görünüyor. Ancak insanların mahsul ekmeye başlamasından sonraki ilk birkaç bin yılda, herkesten çok daha büyük ve gösterişli evlere sahip elit bir tabaka ortaya çıkmaya başlar. »
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" What we do know is that not long after the origin of agriculture, humanity invented inequality. Well done, humans. Archaeologists can tell this by looking at the sizes of houses in early settlements. To begin with, there’s not much difference between them. The societies seem to be fairly egalitarian. But over the first few thousand years after humans began planting crops, an elite starts to emerge who have much larger and fancier houses than everybody else. "
« Bilim insanları yakın zamanda, 1950'lerde yaygın plastik kullanımına başladığımızdan bu yana 8.300 milyon tonun üzerinde plastik ürettiğimizi tahmin ediyor. Bunun 6.300 milyon tonunu çöpe attık ve bu şu anda dünya yüzeyinde asılı duruyor. Yaşasın insanlar.»
« Scientists recently estimated that since we started the widespread use of plastic in the 1950s, we’ve made over 8,300 million tons of it. Of that, we’ve thrown away 6,300 million tons, which is now just hanging around the surface of the earth. Yay, humans.»
On May 7, 2016—a little under a century and a half after Mary Ward went for a drive one fateful summer’s morning—a man named Joshua Brown was driving down a road near Williston, Florida, in his Tesla Model S, which was in autopilot mode. A later investigation showed that in the 37 minutes of his journey, he had his hands on the wheel for just 25 seconds; he was relying on the car’s software to control the vehicle for the rest of the time. When a truck pulled out into the road, neither Brown nor the software spotted it, and the car crashed into the truck.
Joshua Brown became the first person in the history of the world to die in a self-driving car accident.
In 1971, the Russian cosmonauts Georgiy Dobrovolski, Viktor Patsayev and Vladislav Volkov became the first people to die in space, after their Soyuz module decompressed on their return from a space station.