About This Book
An evolutionary account of human social development tracing stages labeled savagery, barbarism, and civilization, examining material inventions, family and kinship forms, marriage rules, property concepts, political organization in gentes, phratries and tribes, and religious and linguistic growth. It compares ethnographic and archaeological evidence, drawing heavily on observations from indigenous communities in the Americas, to argue that institutions and technologies record progressive sequences such as fire, tools, domestication, pottery and metallurgy, and changing family systems tending toward monogamy and individual property. The work assembles comparative data to map parallel lines of invention and social organization that illuminate how collective institutions emerged and transformed over long time spans.
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