Home › Forum Online Discussion › General › Man-thropology: Why Modern Men are Whimps
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October 21, 2009 at 5:34 pm #32416Michael WinnKeymaster
note: the unasked question is whether we have traded in our physical prowess for greater mental and spiritual prowess. – m
MODERN MAN A WIMP SAYS ANTHROPOLOGIST
By John Mehaffey
Reuters
October 14, 2009http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSTRE59D0BR20091014?pageNumber=1&vi
rtualBrandChannel=11604&sp=trueLONDON – Many prehistoric Australian aboriginals could have outrun world 100
and 200 meters record holder Usain Bolt in modern conditions.Some Tutsi men in Rwanda exceeded the current world high jump record of 2.45
meters during initiation ceremonies in which they had to jump at least their
own height to progress to manhood.Any Neanderthal woman could have beaten former bodybuilder and current
California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in an arm wrestle.These and other eye-catching claims are detailed in a book by Australian
anthropologist Peter McAllister entitled “Manthropology” and provocatively
sub-titled “The Science of the Inadequate Modern Male.”McAllister sets out his stall in the opening sentence of the prologue.
“If you’re reading this then you — or the male you have bought it for —
are the worst man in history.“No ifs, no buts — the worst man, period…As a class we are in fact the
sorriest cohort of masculine Homo sapiens to ever walk the planet.”Delving into a wide range of source material McAllister finds evidence he
believes proves that modern man is inferior to his predecessors in, among
other fields, the basic Olympic athletics disciplines of running and
jumping.His conclusions about the speed of Australian aboriginals 20,000 years ago
are based on a set of footprints, preserved in a fossilized claypan lake
bed, of six men chasing prey.FLEET-FOOTED ABORIGINALS
An analysis of the footsteps of one of the men, dubbed T8, shows he reached
speeds of 37 kph on a soft, muddy lake edge. Bolt, by comparison, reached a
top speed of 42 kph during his then world 100 meters record of 9.69 seconds
at last year’s Beijing Olympics.In an interview in the English university town of Cambridge where he was
temporarily resident, McAllister said that, with modern training, spiked
shoes and rubberized tracks, aboriginal hunters might have reached speeds of
45 kph.“We can assume they are running close to their maximum if they are chasing
an animal,” he said.“But if they can do that speed of 37 kph on very soft ground I suspect there
is a strong chance they would have outdone Usain Bolt if they had all the
advantages that he does.“We can tell that T8 is accelerating toward the end of his tracks.”
McAllister said it was probable that any number of T8’s contemporaries could
have run as fast.“We have to remember too how incredibly rare these fossilizations are,” he
said. “What are the odds that you would get the fastest runner in Australia
at that particular time in that particular place in such a way that was
going to be preserved?”Turning to the high jump, McAllister said photographs taken by a German
anthropologist showed young men jumping heights of up to 2.52 meters in the
early years of last century.STARK DECLINE
“It was an initiation ritual, everybody had to do it. They had to be able to
jump their own height to progress to manhood,” he said.“It was something they did all the time and they lived very active lives
from a very early age. They developed very phenomenal abilities in jumping.
They were jumping from boyhood onwards to prove themselves.”McAllister said a Neanderthal woman had 10 percent more muscle bulk than
modern European man. Trained to capacity she would have reached 90 percent
of Schwarzenegger’s bulk at his peak in the 1970s.“But because of the quirk of her physiology, with a much shorter lower arm,
she would slam him to the table without a problem,” he said.Manthropology abounds with other examples:
* Roman legions completed more than one-and-a-half marathons a day carrying
more than half their body weight in equipment.* Athens employed 30,000 rowers who could all exceed the achievements of
modern oarsmen.* Australian aboriginals threw a hardwood spear 110 meters or more (the
current world javelin record is 98.48).McAllister said it was difficult to equate the ancient spear with the modern
javelin but added: “Given other evidence of Aboriginal man’s superb
athleticism you’d have to wonder whether they couldn’t have taken out every
modern javelin event they entered.”Why the decline?
“We are so inactive these days and have been since the industrial revolution
really kicked into gear,” McAllister replied. “These people were much more
robust than we were.“We don’t see that because we convert to what things were like about 30
years ago. There’s been such a stark improvement in times, technique has
improved out of sight, times and heights have all improved vastly since then
but if you go back further it’s a different story.“At the start of the industrial revolution there are statistics about how
much harder people worked then.“The human body is very plastic and it responds to stress. We have lost 40
percent of the shafts of our long bones because we have much less of a
muscular load placed upon them these days.“We are simply not exposed to the same loads or challenges that people were
in the ancient past and even in the recent past so our bodies haven’t
developed. Even the level of training that we do, our elite athletes,
doesn’t come close to replicating that.“We wouldn’t want to go back to the brutality of those days but there are
some things we would do well to profit from.”October 21, 2009 at 9:11 pm #32417StevenModeratorSince ancient man’s lifespan was shorter, maybe
the extra physical prowess was the faster burning-up
of the life’s storehouse of qi. -
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