P901:4, 81:2.1
The growth of culture is predicated upon the development of the tools of civilization.
And the tools which man utilized in his ascent from savagery were effective
just to the extent that they released man power for the accomplishment of
higher tasks.
P901:5, 81:2.2
You who now live amid
latter-day scenes of budding culture and beginning progress
in social affairs, who actually have some little spare time in which to think
about society and civilization, must not overlook the fact that your early
ancestors had little or no leisure which could be devoted to thoughtful reflection
and social thinking.
P901:6, 81:2.3
The first four great advances in human civilization were:
P901:13, 81:2.6
In the
premachine age the only way in which man could accomplish work without
doing it himself was to use an animal. Domestication of animals placed in
his hands living tools, the intelligent use of which prepared the way for
both agriculture and transportation. And without these animals man could not
have risen from his primitive estate to the levels of subsequent civilization.
P902:1, 81:2.7
Most of the animals best suited to domestication were found in Asia, especially
in the central to southwest regions. This was one reason why civilization
progressed faster in that locality than in other parts of the world. Many
of these animals had been twice before domesticated, and in the Andite age
they were
retamed once again. But the dog had remained with the hunters ever
since being adopted by the blue man long, long before.
P902:2, 81:2.8
The Andites of Turkestan were the first peoples to extensively domesticate
the horse, and this is another reason why their culture was for so long predominant.
By 5000 B.C. the Mesopotamian, Turkestan, and Chinese
farmers had begun the raising of sheep, goats, cows, camels, horses,
fowls,
and elephants. They employed as beasts of burden the ox, camel, horse, and
yak. Man was himself at one time the beast of burden. One ruler of the blue
race once had one hundred thousand men in his colony of burden bearers.
P902:3, 81:2.9
The institutions of slavery and private ownership of land came with agriculture.
Slavery raised the master's standard of living and provided more leisure for
social culture.
P902:4, 81:2.10
The savage is a slave to nature, but scientific civilization is slowly conferring
increasing liberty on mankind. Through animals, fire, wind, water, electricity,
and other undiscovered sources of energy, man has liberated, and will continue
to liberate, himself from the necessity for unremitting toil. Regardless of
the transient trouble produced by the prolific invention of machinery, the
ultimate benefits to be derived from such mechanical inventions are inestimable.
Civilization can never flourish, much less be established, until man has leisure
to think, to plan, to imagine new and better ways of doing things.
P902:5, 81:2.11
Man first simply appropriated his shelter, lived under ledges or dwelt in
caves. Next he adapted such natural materials as wood and stone to the creation
of family huts. Lastly he entered the creative stage of home building, learned
to manufacture brick and other building materials.
P902:6, 81:2.12
The peoples of the Turkestan highlands were the first of the more modern races
to build their homes of wood, houses not at all unlike the early log
cabins
of the American pioneer
settlers. Throughout the plains human dwellings were
made of brick; later on, of burned
bricks.
P902:7, 81:2.13
The older river races made their huts by setting tall poles in the ground
in a circle; the tops were then brought together, making the skeleton frame
for the hut, which was
interlaced with transverse reeds, the whole creation
resembling a huge
inverted basket. This structure could then be
daubed over
with clay and, after drying in the sun, would make a very serviceable
weatherproof
habitation.
P902:8, 81:2.14
It was from these early huts that the subsequent idea of all sorts of basket
weaving independently originated. Among one group the idea of making pottery
arose from observing the effects of smearing these pole
frameworks with moist
clay. The practice of
hardening pottery by baking was discovered when one
of these
clay-covered primitive huts accidentally burned. The arts of olden
days were many times derived from the accidental occurrences attendant upon
the daily life of early peoples. At least, this was almost wholly true of
the evolutionary progress of mankind up to the coming of Adam.
P903:1, 81:2.15
While pottery had been first introduced by the staff of the Prince about one-half
million years ago, the making of clay vessels had practically ceased for over
one hundred and fifty thousand years. Only the gulf coast pre-Sumerian Nodites
continued to make clay vessels. The art of pottery making was revived during
Adam's time. The dissemination of this art was simultaneous with the extension
of the desert areas of Africa, Arabia, and central Asia, and it spread in
successive waves of improving technique from Mesopotamia out over the Eastern
Hemisphere.
P903:2, 81:2.16
These civilizations of the Andite age cannot always be traced by the stages
of their pottery or other arts. The smooth course of human evolution was tremendously
complicated by the regimes of both Dalamatia and Eden. It often occurs that
the later
vases and implements are inferior to the earlier products of the
purer Andite peoples.