• Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

CenterTao.org

taoism, taoist thought, buddha, yoga, tai chi, shakuhachi

  • Tao Te Ching
  • Ways
  • Posts

hunter gatherer

And Then There Was Fire

I’ve always found pondering the how’s and why’s of life and the world to be irresistible. The mountain of historical and scientific information available certainly makes this challenging. Happily, a lifetime of inquiry may be paying off. I can see outlines of the big picture now. The constant difficulty lies in how mountains of detail […]

Continue reading…

Aug 27, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: agricultural age, Buddha, civilization, desire, electricity age, emergent property, future of humanity, hunter gatherer, iron age, language, religion, science

Upping the Ante

Have you noticed the ever-present urge to continue to up the ante? Not only that, but isn’t the sky often the limit? We can’t help but aim for the next step up, and when we reach it, that level becomes our new bottom line. Most of us are content for a while, but then we […]

Continue reading…

Jul 30, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: desire, emergent property, freewill, hunter gatherer, learning, yoga

Imagining a Better Way

Human imagination is both a valuable survival asset and the source of lingering anxieties. Ironically, imagination also promises us ways to quell these anxieties. I say promises because fulfillment can’t truly be possible. This peculiar dynamic reminds me of the Möbius like geometry of Escher’s Waterfall. We can imagine a better something and so we […]

Continue reading…

Apr 29, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: bio-hoodwink, future, gossip, hunter gatherer, imagination, memory, past, perfect, suffering

The Only Safe Escape

The only way I’ve found to escape life without unintended consequences is to give myself to life. It is a bit ironic… as chapter 78 says, Straight and honest words seem inside out, or as D.C. Lau put it, straightforward words seem paradoxical. At times, I can lose myself in the flowing moment by utter […]

Continue reading…

Apr 9, 2012 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: addiction, desire, happy, hunter gatherer, pleasure, stress, wei wu wei

Naturally Unnatural, Naturally!

Occasionally I hear people opine on what is or isn’t natural human behavior. Doesn’t this depend on what part of the elephant (See Biology’s Blinders, p.2) one currently perceives? Elephant parables aside, I see this issue as emerging layers of reality’s onion. (See Tao as Emergent Property, p.121.) Let me sort this out… Like all […]

Continue reading…

Oct 10, 2011 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: bio-hoodwink, civilization, emergent property, hunter gatherer, pleasure v pain, the easy way

Why Man is King

Up until now, civilization has put Man at the top, and Woman at the bottom of civilization’s hierarchical structure. I once thought civilization simply incorporated a great ape trait wherein an alpha-male dominates the group. That may still be one reason, but I also see universal forces in either setting up or breaking down this […]

Continue reading…

Sep 21, 2011 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: civilization, family, hunter gatherer, independance, symptoms point of view, the electric age

An Improper Sense of Awe

I marvel at how seriously some people take prophets of doom. Still, I do understand the apprehension. Certainly, my own apocalyptic sense of life probably accounts for my serious side. True believers in Western religions, i.e., a Judeo-Christian-Islamic worldview, have the end of times Judgment Day (1) to worry about. Being a Taoist lets me […]

Continue reading…

Jun 18, 2011 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: belief, fear, Hindu-Buddhist-Taoist world view, hunter gatherer, Judeo-Christian-Islamic world view, knowing

Don’t trust anyone under 60

The Science News’ article, Don’t trust any elephant under 60, reveals factors elephants use to choose a leader. (Google [Leadership in elephants: the adaptive value of age].) Surely, their criterion applies to all animals including people. Our choices for what to look for in a leader runs the gamut, as this excerpt from the Science […]

Continue reading…

May 29, 2011 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, civilization, future, hunter gatherer, intelligence, mind, progress, wisdom

It’s Time We Changed Our Name

It’s time we changed our species’ name from “Homo sapiens” to something else. “Homo sociâlis”, would be my best Linnaeus guess. We are not the great “wise” or “knowing” animal that we claim to be. We are instead more profoundly social than we may realize. Research reported in the Science News article, In-laws transformed early […]

Continue reading…

Apr 26, 2011 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: evolution, family, hunter gatherer, parents, social

Democracy as Myth

All social species need their ‘alpha-male’ for governance even if that’s the queen of a beehive. Being a more complex than bees, human governance is multi-layered and hierarchical to varying degrees. Indeed, the more sophisticated the culture/civilization, the more layers—the more hierarchical. Conversely, our ancestor hunter-gatherers had few, if any, layers — no courts, parliaments, […]

Continue reading…

Mar 13, 2011 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: civilization, freedom, government, hunter gatherer, power, understanding, wall street

Why God?

Why God? I have not heard this question asked much… if at all. Debate focuses mostly on whose God is true, the nature of God, or does God even exist. I suppose asking “Why do we believe in God” is a zoological inquiry of sorts. That is the place to begin… After all, we are […]

Continue reading…

Feb 5, 2011 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: belief, civilization, emergent property, happy, hunter gatherer, religion, symptoms point of view, thinking

Poor Thais And Rich Swedes

I had a little bakery on the Thai-Cambodian border in the early 60’s. It was little more than a shack, but big enough for me and my common law Thai wife (photo right), her mother, brother, and sister (1). Most of the customers were Thai peasants who would stop by for some sponge cake on […]

Continue reading…

Jul 17, 2010 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: contentment, happy, hunter gatherer, poverty, struggle, wealth

Omega-3 and Vitamin D

When it comes to human nutrition, it is a struggle separating the wheat from the chaff. Each era has its blind alleys of nutrition. Foods deemed healthy today could easily be less so tomorrow… and vice versa. In the 70’s, I got nutrition religion and set out to uncover information that was closer to the truth. […]

Continue reading…

Apr 2, 2010 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: balance, diet, food, hunter gatherer, nutrician, omega 3, science, vitamins

Hunger: A Natural Stimulant

It’s been my habit for decades to eat nothing much until late afternoon, even though I start my day early. This goes against the norm that breakfast is the most important meal of the day. Sure, this may be a little stressful to my body, but that turns out to be a good thing. As […]

Continue reading…

Mar 21, 2010 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: civilization, desire, food, hunger, hunter gatherer

The Future Takes Care of Itself

My mind often wanders and wonders about ‘tomorrow’, whether that’s five minutes, five weeks, or five millennia from now. I reckon a hunter-gatherer instinct drives this because everyone I know sees a ‘tomorrow’ awaiting them. Why are humans always jumping ahead of the moment? … Because we can! The mind’s space is larger than most […]

Continue reading…

Jan 28, 2010 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Autobiographical Tagged With: future, hunter gatherer, knowing

Peeking in on Nature’s Hoodwink

We are born with a bio-illusion — a bio-hoodwink(1) — that goes like this: Through hunting, “I” gathers fillers to satiate (fill) the hole. Primal emotions of need (e.g., desire, wish) and fear (e.g., insecurity, anxiety) drive this illusion forward. This illusion originates in the survival instinct to find food to fill the empty belly. […]

Continue reading…

Dec 13, 2008 by Carl Abbott
Filed Under: Observations Tagged With: balance, bio-hoodwink, civilization, hunter gatherer, pleasure v pain

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2

Footer

Overview

  • Is Taoism a Religion?
  • What is Taoist thought?
  • What is the root of thought?

Chronological Index

View all posts from 2008 to 2025

Categories

  • Autobiographical (73)
  • Monthly Tao Te Ching (135)
  • Observations (234)
    • Tao Tips (17)
  • Occam's razor (2)
  • Who Are You Series (6)
  • Wrapping up (18)

Who is CenterTao?

CenterTao is a non-profit corporation founded in 1982. Read more…

Links

  • CenterTao Facebook Group
  • Blowing Zen - Shakuhachi
  • 2004-2015 Forum Archive (read-only)

1604