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  3. Researchers challenge long-held assumptions about the origins of domestication

Researchers challenge long-held assumptions about the origins of domestication

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    cm0002@lemmy.world
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    Researchers challenge long-held assumptions about the origins of domestication

    A special issue of Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B takes a bold step toward redefining one of the most debated concepts in biology and the social sciences: domestication. Titled "Shifting Paradigms Towards Integrated Perspectives in Domestication Studies," the issue gathers leading voices in archaeology, evolutionary biology, and plant science to question conventional narratives and introduce new case studies that push the field forward.

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      Researchers challenge long-held assumptions about the origins of domestication

      A special issue of Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B takes a bold step toward redefining one of the most debated concepts in biology and the social sciences: domestication. Titled "Shifting Paradigms Towards Integrated Perspectives in Domestication Studies," the issue gathers leading voices in archaeology, evolutionary biology, and plant science to question conventional narratives and introduce new case studies that push the field forward.

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      “People did different things at different times and places depending on their circumstances” is not exactly news, even in academic circles where head-in-the-sand disorder is all to real. Davids Graeber and Wengrove covered it to much popular acclaim in The Dawn of Everything, and the anthro/archaeology was going on for decades prior.

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