What is the development of humanity? Historical eras in order: chronology

Scientists claim that modern man did not descend from modern apes, which are characterized by narrow specialization (adaptation to a strictly defined way of life in tropical forests), but from highly organized animals that died out several million years ago - dryopithecus. The process of human evolution is very long, its main stages are presented in the diagram.

The main stages of anthropogenesis (the evolution of human ancestors)

According to paleontological finds (fossil remains), about 30 million years ago ancient primates Parapithecus appeared on Earth, living in open spaces and in trees. Their jaws and teeth were similar to those of apes. Parapithecus gave rise to modern gibbons and orangutans, as well as the extinct branch of Dryopithecus. The latter in their development were divided into three lines: one of them led to the modern gorilla, the other to the chimpanzee, and the third to Australopithecus, and from him to man. The relationship of Dryopithecus with humans was established based on a study of the structure of its jaw and teeth, discovered in 1856 in France.

The most important stage on the path to the transformation of ape-like animals into ancient people was the appearance of upright walking. Due to climate change and forest thinning, a transition has occurred from an arboreal to a terrestrial way of life; in order to better survey the area where human ancestors had many enemies, they had to stand on their hind limbs. Subsequently, natural selection developed and consolidated upright posture, and, as a consequence of this, the hands were freed from the functions of support and movement. This is how Australopithecines arose - the genus to which hominids (a family of humans) belong..

Australopithecus

Australopithecines are highly developed bipedal primates that used objects of natural origin as tools (hence, Australopithecines cannot yet be considered human). Bone remains of Australopithecines were first discovered in 1924 in South Africa. They were as tall as a chimpanzee and weighed about 50 kg, their brain volume reached 500 cm 3 - according to this feature, Australopithecus is closer to humans than any of the fossil and modern monkeys.

The structure of the pelvic bones and the position of the head were similar to those of humans, indicating an upright position of the body. They lived about 9 million years ago in the open steppes and ate plant and animal foods. The tools of their labor were stones, bones, sticks, jaws without traces of artificial processing.

A skilled man

Not having a narrow specialization of the general structure, Australopithecus gave rise to a more progressive form, called Homo habilis - a skilled person. Its bone remains were discovered in 1959 in Tanzania. Their age is determined to be approximately 2 million years. The height of this creature reached 150 cm. The volume of the brain was 100 cm 3 larger than that of australopithecines, the teeth of the human type, the phalanges of the fingers were flattened like those of a person.

Although it combined the characteristics of both monkeys and humans, the transition of this creature to the manufacture of pebble tools (well-made stone) indicates the appearance of its labor activity. They could catch animals, throw stones and perform other actions. The piles of bones found with the Homo habilis fossils indicate that meat became a regular part of their diet. These hominids used crude stone tools.

Homo erectus

Homo erectus is a man who walks upright. the species from which modern humans are believed to have evolved. Its age is 1.5 million years. Its jaws, teeth and brow ridges were still massive, but the brain volume of some individuals was the same as that of modern humans.

Some Homo erectus bones have been found in caves, suggesting its permanent home. In addition to animal bones and fairly well-made stone tools, heaps of charcoal and burnt bones were found in some caves, so, apparently, at this time, Australopithecines had already learned to make fire.

This stage of hominid evolution coincides with the settlement of other colder regions by people from Africa. It would be impossible to survive cold winters without developing complex behaviors or technical skills. Scientists hypothesize that the prehuman brain of Homo erectus was capable of finding social and technical solutions (fire, clothing, food storage, and cave dwelling) to the problems associated with surviving the winter cold.

Thus, all fossil hominids, especially australopithecus, are considered to be the predecessors of humans.

The evolution of the physical characteristics of the first people, including modern man, covers three stages: ancient people, or archanthropes; ancient people, or paleoanthropes; modern people, or neoanthropes.

Archanthropes

The first representative of the archanthropes is Pithecanthropus (Japanese man) - an ape-man who walks upright. His bones were found on the island. Java (Indonesia) in 1891. Initially, its age was determined to be 1 million years, but, according to a more accurate modern estimate, it is slightly more than 400 thousand years old. The height of Pithecanthropus was about 170 cm, the volume of the skull was 900 cm 3.

Somewhat later there was Sinanthropus (Chinese man). Numerous remains of it were found in the period 1927 to 1963. in a cave near Beijing. This creature used fire and made stone tools. This group of ancient people also includes Heidelberg Man.

Paleoanthropes

Paleoanthropes - Neanderthals appeared to replace the Archanthropes. 250-100 thousand years ago they were widely distributed throughout Europe. Africa. Western and South Asia. Neanderthals made a variety of stone tools: hand axes, scrapers, pointed points; they used fire and rough clothing. Their brain volume increased to 1400 cm3.

The structural features of the lower jaw show that they had rudimentary speech. They lived in groups of 50-100 individuals and during the advance of glaciers they used caves, driving wild animals out of them.

Neoanthropes and Homo sapiens

Neanderthals were replaced by modern people - Cro-Magnons - or neoanthropes. They appeared about 50 thousand years ago (their bone remains were found in 1868 in France). Cro-Magnons form the only genus of the species Homo Sapiens - Homo sapiens. Their ape-like features were completely smoothed out, there was a characteristic chin protuberance on the lower jaw, indicating their ability to articulate speech, and in the art of making various tools from stone, bone and horn, the Cro-Magnons went far ahead compared to the Neanderthals.

They tamed animals and began to master agriculture, which allowed them to get rid of hunger and obtain a variety of food. Unlike their predecessors, the evolution of Cro-Magnons took place under the great influence of social factors (team unity, mutual support, improvement of work activity, a higher level of thinking).

The emergence of Cro-Magnons is the final stage in the formation of modern man. The primitive human herd was replaced by the first tribal system, which completed the formation of human society, the further progress of which began to be determined by socio-economic laws.

Human races

Humanity living today is divided into a number of groups called races.
Human races
- these are historically established territorial communities of people with a unity of origin and similarity of morphological characteristics, as well as hereditary physical characteristics: facial structure, body proportions, skin color, shape and hair color.

Based on these characteristics, modern humanity is divided into three main races: Caucasian, Negroid And Mongoloid. Each of them has its own morphological characteristics, but all of these are external, secondary characteristics.

The features that make up the human essence, such as consciousness, labor activity, speech, the ability to cognize and subjugate nature, are the same in all races, which refutes the claims of racist ideologists about “superior” nations and races.

The children of blacks, raised together with Europeans, were not inferior to them in intelligence and talent. It is known that the centers of civilization 3-2 thousand years BC were in Asia and Africa, and Europe at that time was in a state of barbarism. Consequently, the level of culture depends not on biological characteristics, but on the socio-economic conditions in which peoples live.

Thus, the claims of reactionary scientists about the superiority of some races and the inferiority of others are groundless and pseudoscientific. They were created to justify wars of conquest, plunder of colonies and racial discrimination.

Human races cannot be confused with such social associations as nationality and nation, which were formed not according to a biological principle, but on the basis of the stability of common speech, territory, economic and cultural life, formed historically.

In the history of his development, man has emerged from subordination to the biological laws of natural selection; his adaptation to life in different conditions occurs through their active alteration. However, these conditions still have a certain effect on the human body to some extent.

The results of this influence are visible in a number of examples: in the peculiarities of digestive processes among reindeer herders of the Arctic, who consume a lot of meat, among residents of Southeast Asia, whose diet consists mainly of rice; in an increased number of red blood cells in the blood of highlanders compared to the blood of inhabitants of the plains; in the pigmentation of the skin of the inhabitants of the tropics, distinguishing them from the whiteness of the skin of the northerners, etc.

After the completion of the formation of modern man, the action of natural selection did not cease completely. As a result, in a number of regions of the globe, humans have developed resistance to certain diseases. Thus, among Europeans, measles is much milder than among the peoples of Polynesia, who encountered this infection only after the colonization of their islands by settlers from Europe.

In Central Asia, blood group O is rare in humans, but the frequency of group B is higher. It turned out that this is due to a plague epidemic that took place in the past. All these facts prove that biological selection exists in human society, on the basis of which human races, nationalities, and nations were formed. But man's ever-increasing independence from the environment has almost stopped biological evolution.


Basic divisions of human history. Now that a whole system of new concepts has been introduced, we can try, using them, to paint a complete picture of world history, of course, an extremely brief one.

The history of mankind, first of all, is divided into two main periods: (I) the era of the formation of man and society, the time of proto-society and prehistory (1.6-0.04 million years ago) and (II) the era of development of a formed, ready-made human society (from 40-35 thousand years ago to the present). Within the last era, two main eras are clearly distinguished: (1) pre-class (primitive, primitive, egalitarian, etc.) society and (2) class (civilized) society (from 5 thousand years ago to the present day). In turn, in the history of mankind, since the emergence of the first civilizations, the era of the Ancient East (III-F millennium BC), the Ancient era (8th century BC - V century AD), and the Middle Ages ( VI-XV centuries), New (XVI century -1917) and Newest (since 1917) eras.

The period of slavery and prehistory (1.6-0.04 million years). Man emerged from the animal world. As is now firmly established, between the animal predecessors of man, on the one hand, and people as they are now (Homo sapiens), on the other, lies an unusually long period of formation of man and society (anthroposociogenesis). The people who lived at that time were people still in their formation (proto-people). Their society was still just forming. It can only be characterized as a proto-society.

Some scientists consider the habilis, who replaced the australopithecines, approximately 2.5 million years ago, to be the first people (protohumans), while others consider the archanthropes (pithecanthropus, synanthropus, atlantropes, etc.) to be the first people, who replaced the habilis, approximately 1 .6 million ago. The second point of view is closer to the truth, because only with the archanthropes did language, thinking and social relations begin to form. As for the Habilis, they, like the Australopithecines, were not proto-humans, but pre-humans, but not early, but late.

The formation of man and human society was based on the process of emergence and development of production activity and material production. The emergence and development of production necessarily required not only a change in the organism of producing creatures, but also the emergence between them of completely new relations, qualitatively different from those that existed among animals, relations that were not biological, but social, that is, the emergence of human society. There are no social relations and society in the animal world. They are unique to humans. The emergence of qualitatively new relationships, and thus completely new, uniquely human stimuli of behavior, was absolutely impossible without limitation and suppression, without introducing into the social framework the old, undivided driving forces of behavior in the animal world - biological instincts. The urgent objective necessity was to curb and introduce into the social framework two egoistic animal instincts - food and sex.

The curbing of the food instinct began with the emergence of the earliest proto-humans - the archanthropes and ended in the next phase of anthroposociogenesis, when they were replaced 0.3-0.2 million years ago by the proto-people of a more advanced species - the paleoanthropes, more precisely, with the appearance of 75-70 thousand. years ago of late paleoanthropes. It was then that the formation of the first form of socio-economic relations - collapsible-communalist relations - was completed. With the curbing and placing under social control of the sexual instinct, which was expressed in the emergence of the clan and the first form of marriage relations - the dual-clan organization, which happened 35-40 thousand years ago, the emerging people and the emerging society were replaced by ready-made people and a ready-made society, the first form of which was primitive society.

The era of primitive (pre-class) society (40-6 thousand years ago). In the development of pre-class society, the stages of early primitive (primitive-communist) and late primitive (primitive-prestige) societies were successively replaced. Then came the era of society in transition from primitive to class, or pre-class.

At the stage of pre-class society, there were emerging peasant-communal (proto-peasant-communal), emerging politaristic (protopolitary), nobilary, dominant and magnar modes of production, with the last two often forming one single hybrid mode of production, dominomagnar. (See Lecture VI "Main and Minor Modes of Production.") They, individually or in various combinations, determined the socio-economic type of pre-class sociohistorical organisms.

There were societies in which the proto-peasant-communal way of life dominated - the proto-peasant ones (1). In a significant number of pre-class societies, the proto-political way of life was dominant. These are protopolitarian societies (2). Societies with dominance of nobilary relations have been observed - proton-bilary societies (3). There were sociohistorical organisms in which the dominant mode of production dominated - protodominomagnar societies (4). In some societies, nobilary and dominomagnar forms of exploitation coexisted and played approximately the same role. These are protonobil-magnar societies (5). Another type is a society in which dominomagnetic relations were combined with the exploitation of its ordinary members by a special military corporation, which in Rus' was called a squad. The scientific term for designating such a corporation could be the word “militia” (Latin militia - army), and its leader - the word “militarch”. Accordingly, such sociohistorical organisms can be called protomilito-magnar societies (6).

None of these six main types of pre-class society can be characterized as a socio-economic formation, because it was not a stage of world-historical development. Such a stage was pre-class society, but it also cannot be called a socio-economic formation, because it did not represent a single socio-economic type.

The concept of paraformation is hardly applicable to different socio-economic types of pre-class society. They did not complement any socio-economic formation that existed as a stage of world history, but all taken together replaced the socio-economic formation. Therefore, it would be best to call them socio-economic proformations (from the Greek pro - instead).

Of all the named types of pre-class society, only the protopolitan proformation was capable of transforming into a class society without the influence of societies of a higher type, and, of course, in an ancient political way. The remaining proformations constituted a kind of historical reserve.

The era of the Ancient East (III-II millennium BC). The first class society in human history was political. It first appeared at the end of the 4th millennium BC. in the form of two historical nests: a large politarian sociohistorical organism in the Nile Valley (Egypt) and a system of small politary sociohistorical organisms in southern Mesopotamia (Sumer). Thus, human society split into two historical worlds: pre-class, which turned into inferior, and political, which became superior. Further development followed the path, on the one hand, of the emergence of new isolated historical nests (the Harappa civilization in the Indus basin and the Shan (Yin) civilization in the Yellow River Valley), on the other hand, the emergence of more and more new historical nests in the neighborhood of Mesopotamia and Egypt and the formation of a huge system of political sociohistorical organisms that covered the entire Middle East. This kind of set of sociohistorical organisms can be called a historical arena. The Middle Eastern historical arena was the only one at that time. It was the center of world historical development and, in this sense, the world system. The world was divided into a political center and a periphery, which was partly primitive (including pre-class), partly class-based, political.

Ancient Eastern societies were characterized by a cyclical nature of development. They arose, flourished, and then fell into decline. In a number of cases, the death of civilization occurred and a return to the stage of pre-class society (Indus and Mycenaean civilizations). This, first of all, was due to the inherent way of a political society to increase the level of development of the productive forces - the increase in the productivity of social production due to an increase in working hours. But this temporal (from the Latin tempus - time), method of increasing the productivity of social production, in contrast to the technical method, is a dead end. Sooner or later, a further increase in working hours became impossible. It led to physical degradation and even death of the main productive force - workers, which resulted in the decline and even death of society.

Ancient era (8th century BC - 5th century AD). Due to the dead end of the temporal method of development of productive forces, political society was unable to transform into a society of a higher type. A new, more progressive socio-economic formation - ancient, slaveholding, ser-varny - arose as a result of a process that was above called ultrasuperiorization. The emergence of ancient society was a consequence of the comprehensive influence of the Middle Eastern world system on the previously pre-class Greek sociohistorical organisms. This influence has long been noticed by historians, who called this process Orientalization. As a result, the pre-class Greek sociors, who belonged to a proformation different from the protopolitan one, namely the protonobil-magnar one, first (in the 8th century BC) became dominomagnary societies (Archaic Greece), and then turned into actually ancient, server ones. Thus, along with the two previous historical worlds (primitive and political), a new one arose - ancient, which became superior.

Following the Greek historical nest, new historical nests arose in which the formation of the servar (ancient) method of production took place: Etruscan, Carthaginian, Latin. The ancient sociohistorical organisms taken together formed a new historical arena - the Mediterranean, to which the role of the center of world historical development passed. With the emergence of a new world system, humanity as a whole rose to a new stage of historical development. There was a change of world eras: the era of the Ancient East was replaced by the Antique.

In subsequent development, in the 4th century. BC. The Middle Eastern and Mediterranean historical arenas taken together formed a sociological supersystem - the central historical space (central space), and as a result, became its two historical zones. The Mediterranean zone was the historical center, the Middle East - the inner periphery.

Outside the central historical space there was an external periphery, which was divided into primitive (including pre-class) and political. But unlike the era of the Ancient East, the political periphery existed in ancient times in the form not of isolated historical nests, but of a significant number of historical arenas, between which various kinds of connections arose. In the Old World, the East Asian, Indonesian, Indian, Central Asian arenas and, finally, the Great Steppe were formed, in the vastness of which nomadic empires arose and disappeared. In the New World in the 1st millennium BC. Andean and Mesoamerican historical arenas were formed.

The transition to ancient society was marked by significant progress in the productive forces. But almost the entire increase in the productivity of social production was achieved not so much by improving technology as by increasing the share of workers in the population of society. This is a demographic way of increasing the level of productive forces. In the pre-industrial era, an increase in the number of producers of material goods within a sociohistorical organism without an increase in the same proportion of its entire population could occur only in one way - through the influx of ready-made workers from outside, who did not have the right to have families and acquire offspring.

The constant influx of workers from outside into the composition of one or another sociohistorical organism necessarily presupposed an equally systematic removal of them from the composition of other sociological bodies. All this was impossible without the use of direct violence. Workers brought in from outside could only be slaves. The considered method of increasing the productivity of social production was the establishment of exogenous (from the Greek exo - outside, outside) slavery. Only a constant influx of slaves from outside could make possible the emergence of an independent mode of production based on the labor of such dependent workers. For the first time, this method of production was established only during the heyday of ancient society, and therefore it is usually called ancient. In Chapter VI “Basic and non-basic methods of production” it was called servar.

Thus, a necessary condition for the existence of ancient society was the continuous pumping of human resources from other sociohistorical organisms. And these other sociors had to belong to types different from this one, and preferably to a pre-class society. The existence of a system of societies of the ancient type was impossible without the existence of a vast periphery, consisting primarily of barbarian sociohistorical organisms.

Continuous expansion, which was a necessary condition for the existence of server societies, could not continue indefinitely. Sooner or later it became impossible. The demographic method of increasing the productivity of social production, as well as the temporal one, was a dead end. Ancient society, just like political society, was unable to transform into a society of a higher type. But if the political historical world continued to exist almost to the present day and after leaving the historical highway as an inferior one, then the ancient historical world disappeared forever. But, dying, ancient society passed the baton to other societies. The transition of humanity to a higher stage of social development again occurred through what was called above formational super-elevation, or ultra-superiorization.

The era of the Middle Ages (VI-XV centuries). The Western Roman Empire, undermined by internal contradictions, collapsed under the onslaught of the Germans. There was a superposition of Germanic pre-class demo-social organisms, which belonged to a proformation different from the protopolitan one, namely protomilitomagnar, on the fragments of the Western Roman geosocial organism. As a result, on the same territory, some people lived as part of demosocial pre-class organisms, while others lived as part of a half-destroyed class geosocial organism. Such coexistence of two qualitatively different socio-economic and other social structures could not last too long. There had to be either the destruction of demosocial structures and the victory of geosocial ones, or the disintegration of geosocial ones and the triumph of demosocial ones, or, finally, a synthesis of both. On the territory of the lost Western Roman Empire, what historians call the Romano-Germanic synthesis took place. As a result, a new, more progressive mode of production was born - feudal and, accordingly, a new socio-economic formation.

A Western European feudal system emerged, which became the center of world-historical development. The ancient era was replaced by a new one - the era of the Middle Ages. The Western European world system existed as one of the zones of the preserved, but at the same time rebuilt, central historical space. This space included the Byzantine and Middle Eastern zones as an internal periphery. The latter as a result of the Arab conquests of the 7th-8th centuries. expanded significantly to include part of the Byzantine zone and became an Islamic zone. Then the expansion of the central historical space began due to the territory of Northern, Central and Eastern Europe, filled with pre-class sociohistorical organisms, which also belonged to the same proformation as the German pre-class societies - protomilitomagnar.

These societies, some under the influence of Byzantium, others - Western Europe, began to transform and turned into class sociohistorical organisms. But if ultrasuperiorization occurred on the territory of Western Europe and a new formation appeared - feudal, then a process took place here that was called literalization above. As a result, two similar socio-economic paraformations arose, which, without going into details, can be conditionally characterized as parafeudal (from the Greek para - near, around): one included the sociors of Northern Europe, the other - Central and Eastern. Two new peripheral zones of the central historical space emerged: Northern European and Central-Eastern European, which included Rus'. In the outer periphery, primitive societies and the same political historical arenas continued to exist as in the ancient era.

As a result of the Mongol conquest (XIII century), North-Western Rus' and North-Eastern Rus', taken together, found themselves torn out of the central historical space. The Central-Eastern European zone narrowed to Central European. After getting rid of the Tatar-Mongol yoke (XV century), Northern Rus', which later received the name Russia, returned to the central historical space, but as a special peripheral zone - Russian, which later turned into Eurasian.

Modern times (1600-1917). On the verge of the XV and XVI centuries. capitalism began to take shape in Western Europe. The Western European feudal world system was replaced by the Western European capitalist system, which became the center of world-historical development. The Middle Ages were followed by modern times. Capitalism developed in this era both inward and outward.

The first was expressed in the maturation and establishment of the capitalist structure, in the victory of the bourgeois socio-political revolutions (Dutch 16th century, English 17th century, Great French 18th century). Already with the emergence of cities (X-XII centuries), Western European society embarked on the only path that was capable of ensuring, in principle, unlimited development of productive forces - growth in labor productivity through improving production technology. The technical method of ensuring the growth of productivity of social production finally prevailed after the industrial revolution, which began in the last third of the 18th century.

Capitalism arose as a result of the natural development of the society that preceded it in only one place on the globe - in Western Europe. As a result, humanity was divided into two main historical worlds: the capitalist world and the non-capitalist world, which included primitive (including pre-class), political and parafeudal societies.

Along with the development of capitalism in depth, it developed in breadth. The capitalist world system gradually pulled all peoples and countries into its orbit of influence. The central historical space has turned into a global historical space (world space). Along with the formation of the world historical space, capitalism spread throughout the world and the formation of a global capitalist market. The whole world began to turn into capitalist. For all socio-historical organisms that have lagged behind in their development, no matter at what stage of evolution they lingered: primitive, politaristic or parafeudal, only one path of development became possible - to capitalism.

These sociologists not only had the opportunity to bypass, as we liked to say, all the stages that lay between those in which they were located and the capitalist one. For them, and this is the whole point of the matter, it became impossible not to go through all these steps. Thus, when humanity, represented by a group of advanced sociohistorical organisms, achieved capitalism, then all other main stages became completed not only for these, but, in principle, for all other societies, not excluding primitive ones.

It has long been fashionable to criticize Eurocentrism. There is a certain amount of truth in this criticism. But in general, the Eurocentric approach to the world history of the last three thousand years of human existence is completely justified. If in the III-II millennia BC. the center of world historical development was in the Middle East, where the first world system in the history of mankind was formed - a political one, then, starting from the 8th century. BC, the main line of human development goes through Europe. It was there that the center of world historical development was located and moved all this time, where the other three world systems successively changed - ancient, feudal and capitalist.

The fact that the change from the ancient system to feudal, and feudal to capitalist, took place only in Europe, formed the basis for viewing this line of development as one of many regional ones, as purely Western, purely European. In reality, this is the main line of human development.

The global significance of the bourgeois system formed in Western Europe is undeniable, which by the beginning of the 20th century. drew the whole world into its sphere of influence. The situation is more complicated with the Middle Eastern political, Mediterranean ancient and Western European feudal systems. None of them covered the whole world with its influence. And the degree of their influence on sociohistorical organisms that lagged behind in their development was much less. However, without the Middle Eastern political system of sociohistorical organisms there would not have been an ancient one, without the ancient one there would not have been a feudal one, without a feudal one the capitalist one would not have arisen. Only the consistent development and change of these systems could prepare the emergence of bourgeois society in Western Europe and thereby make not only possible, but also inevitable the movement of all lagging sociohistorical organisms towards capitalism. Thus, ultimately, the existence and development of these three systems affected the fate of all humanity.

Thus, the history of mankind in no case can be considered as a simple sum of the histories of sociohistorical organisms, and socio-economic formations - as identical stages of the evolution of sociohistorical organisms, obligatory for each of them. The history of mankind is a single whole, and socio-economic formations, first of all, are stages of development of this single whole, and not of individual sociohistorical organisms. Formations may or may not be stages in the development of individual sociohistorical organisms. But the latter does not in the least prevent them from being stages of human evolution.
Beginning with the transition to class society, socio-economic formations as stages of world development existed as world systems of sociohistorical organisms of one type or another, systems that were centers of world-historical development. Accordingly, the change in socio-economic formations as stages of world development occurred in the form of a change in world systems, which may or may not have been accompanied by a territorial movement of the center of world historical development. The change in world systems entailed a change in eras of world history.

As a result of the impact of the Western European world capitalist system on all other societies, the world as a whole by the beginning of the 20th century. has turned into a supersystem consisting of capitalist, emerging capitalist, and sociohistorical organisms that have just embarked on the path of capitalist development, which (the supersystem) can be called the international capitalist system. The general trend of evolution was the transformation of all sociohistorical into capitalist.

But it would be erroneous to believe that this development led to the cessation of the division of human society as a whole into a historical center and a historical periphery. The center has been preserved, although somewhat expanded. It included, as a result of the “transplantation” of capitalism, the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, as a result of the formational elevation (superiorization) of the countries of Northern Europe and Japan. As a result, the world capitalist system has ceased to be only Western European. Therefore, they now prefer to call it simply Western.

All other sociohistorical organisms formed the historical periphery. This new periphery was significantly different from the periphery of all previous eras of the development of class society. Firstly, it was all internal, for it was part of the world historical space. Secondly, she was entirely dependent on the center. Some peripheral sociors became colonies of the central powers, while others found themselves in other forms of dependence on the center.

As a result of the influence of the Western world center, bourgeois relations began to penetrate into countries beyond its borders; due to the dependence of these countries on the center, capitalism in them acquired a special form, different from the capitalism that existed in the countries of the center. This capitalism was dependent, peripheral, incapable of progressive development, and a dead end. The division of capitalism into two qualitatively different forms was discovered by R. Prebisch, T. Dos Santos and other supporters of theories of dependent development. R. Prebisch created the first concept of peripheral capitalism.
There is every reason to believe that the capitalism of the center and the capitalism of the periphery represent two related, but nevertheless different modes of production, the first of which can be called orthocapitalism (from the Greek orthos - direct, genuine), and the second paracapitalism (from the Greek para - near, about). Accordingly, the countries of the center and the countries of the periphery belong to two different socio-economic types of society: the first to the ortho-capitalist socio-economic formation, the second to the para-capitalist socio-economic para-formation. Thus, they belong to two different historical worlds. Thus, the impact of the system of superior capitalist organisms on inferior ones, with rare exceptions, resulted not in superiorization, but in lateralization.

The essence of the relationship between the two components of the international capitalist system: the ortho-capitalist center and the para-capitalist periphery lies in the exploitation by the states that are part of the center of the countries that form the periphery. The creators of theories of imperialism drew attention to this: J. Hobson (1858-1940), R. Hilferding (1877-1941), N.I. Bukharin (1888-1938), V.I. Lenin (1870-1924), R. Luxemburg (1871-1919). Subsequently, all the main forms of exploitation of the periphery by the center were examined in detail in the concepts of dependent development.

By the beginning of the 20th century. Russia finally became part of the countries dependent on the center, and thereby also exploited by it. Since by the beginning of the 20th century. Since capitalism in Western Europe has finally established itself, the era of bourgeois revolutions has become a thing of the past for most of its countries. But for the rest of the world and, in particular, for Russia, an era of revolutions has begun, but different from those in the West. These were revolutions that had as their objective goal the destruction of dependence on the ortho-capitalist center, directed simultaneously against both para-capitalism and ortho-capitalism, and in this sense, anti-capitalist. Their first wave occurred in the first two decades of the 20th century: the revolutions of 1905-1907. in Russia, 1905-1911. in Iran, 1908-1909 in Turkey, 1911-1912 in China, 1911-1917 in Mexico, 1917 in Russia.

Modern times (1917-1991). In October 1917, the anti-capitalist workers' and peasants' revolution won in Russia. As a result, this country's dependence on the West was destroyed and it broke out of the periphery. Peripheral capitalism was eliminated in the country, and thereby capitalism in general. But contrary to the aspirations and hopes of both the leaders and participants in the revolution, socialism did not arise in Russia: the level of development of the productive forces was too low. A class society has formed in the country in a number of ways, similar to the ancient political one, but different from it in its technical basis. The old political society was agrarian, the new one was industrial. Ancient politarism was a socio-economic formation, the new one was a socio-economic paraformation.

At first, industrial politarism, or neopolitarism, ensured the rapid development of productive forces in Russia, which had thrown off its shackles of dependence on the West. The latter transformed from a backward agrarian state into one of the most powerful industrial countries in the world, which subsequently ensured the USSR's position as one of the two superpowers.

As a result of the second wave of anti-capitalist revolutions that took place in peripheral countries in the 40s of the 20th century, neopolitarism spread beyond the borders of the USSR. The periphery of the international capitalist system has sharply narrowed. A huge system of neopolitan sociohistorical organisms took shape, which acquired global status. But the global and Western capitalist system has not ceased to exist. As a result, two world systems began to exist on the globe: neopolitarian and ortho-capitalist. The second was the center for the para-capitalist, peripheral countries, which together with it formed the international capitalist system. This structure found expression in what became in the 40-50s. V. the so familiar division of humanity into three worlds: the first (ortho-capitalist), the second ("socialist", neopolitarian) and the third (peripheral, para-capitalist).

Modernity (since 1991). As a result of the counter-revolution of the late 80s - early 90s. Russia, and with it most of the neopolitan countries, has embarked on the path of restoration of capitalism. The neopolitarian world system has disappeared. Thus, the coexistence of two world centers, characteristic of the previous era, disappeared. There was again only one center on the globe - the ortho-capitalist one, and now it was not split, as it was before 1917 and even before 1945, into warring camps. Ortho-capitalist countries are now united under the leadership of one hegemon - the United States, which sharply increases the importance of the center and the possibility of its influence on the whole world. All neopolitarian countries that embarked on the path of capitalist development again found themselves dependent on the ortho-capitalist center and again became part of its periphery. As a result, capitalism, which began to take shape in them, inevitably acquired a peripheral character. As a result, they found themselves in a historical impasse. A relatively small part of neopolitan countries chose a different path of development and retained independence from the center. Along with the dependent periphery, there is an independent periphery in the world (China, Vietnam, North Korea, Cuba, Belarus). It also includes Iran and Iraq.

In addition to the unification of the center around the United States, which meant the emergence of ultra-imperialism, other changes took place. Nowadays, a process called globalization has unfolded in the world. It means the emergence on Earth of a global class society, in which the position of the dominant exploiting class is occupied by the countries of the ortho-capitalist center, and the position of the exploited class is occupied by the countries of the periphery. The formation of a global class society inevitably presupposes the creation by a global ruling class of a global apparatus of coercion and violence. The famous “G7” emerged as a world government, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank as instruments of economic enslavement, and NATO became a special detachment of armed men with the goal of keeping the periphery in obedience and suppressing any resistance to the center. One of the main tasks facing the center is to eliminate the independent periphery. The first blow, which was struck against Iraq, did not lead to achieving the set goal, the second, struck against Yugoslavia, did not immediately, but was crowned with success.

Neither Russia nor other dependent peripheral countries will ever be able to achieve genuine progress, will not be able to end the poverty in which the vast majority of their population now finds themselves, without liberation from dependence, without the destruction of para-capitalism, which is impossible without a struggle against the center, against ortho-capitalism. In a global class society, a global class struggle has inevitably begun and will intensify, on the outcome of which the future of humanity depends.

This struggle takes on a variety of forms and is not waged under the same ideological banners. All fighters against the center are united by the rejection of globalism and, accordingly, capitalism. Anti-globalist movements are also anti-capitalist. But anti-globalism manifests itself in different forms. One of the currents, which is usually called simply anti-globalist, goes under secular banners. Anti-globalists protest against the exploitation of periphery countries by the center and, in one form or another, raise the question of the transition from capitalism to a higher stage of social development, which would preserve and assimilate all the achievements that were achieved under the bourgeois form of social organization. Their ideal lies in the future.

Other movements understand the struggle against globalization and capitalism as a struggle against Western civilization, as a struggle to preserve the traditional forms of life of the peoples of the periphery. The most powerful of them is the movement under the banner of Islamic fundamentalism. For its supporters, the struggle against globalization, against dependence on the West becomes a struggle against all its achievements, including economic, political and cultural: democracy, freedom of conscience, equality of men and women, universal literacy, etc. Their ideal is a return to the Middle Ages, if not to barbarism.

The process of human emergence and development is divided into a number of stages.

1st stage– Autralopithecus, bipedal walking, hunting, systematic use of natural tools, then the activity of making them.

Rice. 6.3.1. Family tree of primates:

1 – insectivores, 2 – Dryopithecus africanus, 3 – Ramapithecus, 4 – Australopithecus africanus, 5 – Australopithecus boisei,

6, 7 – N. erectus, 8 – Neanderthal, 9,10 – N. sapiens, 11 – Old World monkeys, 12 – New World monkeys, 13 – lemurs, 14 – lorises, 15 – tarsiers, 16 – orangutans, 17 – gibbons, 18 – gorillas, 19 – chimpanzees.

2nd stage– primitive herd, pentacanthropus, synanthropus, Neanderthals, systematic production of artificial tools. The emerging social production determined the emergence of consciousness and speech and shaped the human constitution. The formation of man lasted hundreds of thousands of years (Southeast, South, Western Asia and Africa).

3rd stage– the transformation of a primitive herd into a primitive society, and a Neanderthal into a modern person.

For a long time, the most ancient of the proto-humans were Australopithecus and homo habilis(Habilitative Homo), who lived in herds 2.5-3 million years ago, used “natural” tools and only slightly corrected and improved them. They were distinguished by their upright posture. Anthropologists believe that our ancestors acquired upright walking due to the fact that they more systematically used various objects as tools: sticks, horns, stones, bones. Charles Darwin in 1871 gave a natural scientific explanation of the origin of man from animal ancestors and developed the idea of ​​the gradual evolution of man from the original biological forms. He managed to prove that there is a close connection between distant proto-anthropes and modern man ( homo sapiens- a reasonable person).

Within the framework of the biological form of movement, the most important prerequisite for anthropogenesis is phenomenon so-called unlimited progress, i.e. the existence in the evolution of living nature of a single main line from amoeba to man.

In Darwin's theory, valuable for understanding the biological prerequisites of anthropogenesis is the idea that the elementary unit of biological evolution is the population, not the organism.

The population of ancient anthropes consisted of individuals who had labile individual behavior and were distinguished by a high degree of independence and the ability to study, i.e. to the development of conditioned reflexes. In such populations, young individuals survive due to the transmission from their parents of genetic information about behavior and the accumulation of individual experience.

The population of archanthropes began to transform into human society only when it learned to convey individual experience and thereby accumulate social experience.

This was the beginning of a breakthrough into a fundamentally new adaptive zone of evolution. Populations of archanthropes were distinguished by a rich reserve of hereditary variability. The higher this reserve was, the richer the genetic capabilities of the population were, the higher the chances were to survive and develop along the path of unlimited progress.

P

Rice. 6.3.2. Human ancestor - Paranthropus

The last of the biological prerequisites is gregariousness, the union of families into herds. The herd lifestyle of the ancient anthropes undoubtedly contributed to their survival and prosperity. The herds created an environment in which the transfer of experience to each other took place and the cubs learned vital skills: recognizing edible fruits, methods of obtaining food, the ability to detect the location of enemies, as well as the use of natural objects as tools.

The most primitive form of herd known to Homo sapiens is a hunting and gathering group. Groups living by gathering and hunting existed in different areas of the globe until the recent past, and in some places they still exist. For example, the Indian tribes of the Shoshone and Algonquin in North America, the Bushmen and Negritos in Africa, and the aborigines in Australia and Tasmania.

The direction of evolution of the social way of life that emerged among primates continues to this day. At all stages from prosimians to modern humans, there is a general tendency towards increasing the size of the social group and complicating its organization, increasing the technical level, complicating the language, and developing intelligence. The historical development of hominids provides a striking example mosaic evolution, characterized by an uneven pace of development of organs and systems. The evolution of the brain proceeded at the fastest pace, starting with Homo habilis. The development of the brain was preceded by the completion of upright walking and the associated transformation of the pelvic bones and forelimbs.

The driving force behind human evolution was selection. In the early stages of human evolution, there was a selection of individuals more capable of making primitive tools, with the help of which they could obtain food and defend themselves from enemies.

Characteristic feature of anthropogenesis– unidirectionality of evolutionary transformations associated with the development of upright walking, the brain and hands, and the improvement of the collective way of life. The characteristic features of human ancestors (Paranthropus) are presented in Figure 6.3.2.

At the Paranthropus stage, selection based on individual ingenuity played a certain role. Gradually, the object of selection became a characteristic characteristic of humans - herding and the form of communication associated with it. In the struggle for existence, groups of individuals (families) survived, which together could withstand unfavorable environmental factors.

Individual selection based on selectivity shaped primarily the morphophysiological features of the human type of organization (upright posture, brain, hand), and group selection improved social organization (forms of relationships in the herd).

The joint actions of individual and group selection for the best organization of the herd are called biosocial selection. At the beginning of biosocial selection, there were small groups (families or groups of families in a herd). Then the scope of its action expanded to the survival of entire settlements and tribes.

All three levels of biosocial selection (individual family and group) were interconnected in a single process of survival of individuals and groups.

It has become generally accepted to divide the historical path of mankind into:

1. The primitive era;

2. History of the Ancient World;

3. History of the Middle Ages;

4. New time (New history);)

5. Contemporary times Contemporary history).

Length primitive era is determined to be more than 1.5 million years old. During this era, the modern type of man emerged (about 40-30 thousand years ago), tools gradually improved, and the transition from hunting, fishing and gathering to agriculture and cattle breeding began.

History countdown Ancient world has been going on since the emergence of states (IV-III millennium BC). This was the time of the split of society into rulers and the governed, the haves and the have-nots, and the widespread spread of slavery (although it did not have great economic importance in all ancient states). The slave system reached its peak during the period of antiquity (1st millennium BC - beginning of AD), the rise of civilizations Ancient Greece And Ancient Rome .

In recent years, the attempts of mathematician D.T. have gained some popularity. Fomenko, to offer his own chronology of the history of the Ancient World and the Middle Ages. They argue that the reconstruction by historians of many events that occurred earlier than the 16th-17th centuries, before the widespread use of printing, is not indisputable and other options are possible. In particular, they propose to consider that the written history of mankind has been artificially extended by more than a millennium. This, however, is only an assumption that has not been recognized by most historians.

The Middle Ages determined by time frame V–XVII centuries

1st period era (V-XI centuries) marked by the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the emergence of a new type of social relations - the establishment of the class system in Europe (each class has its own rights and responsibilities). Characteristic is the predominance of subsistence farming and the special role of religion.

2nd period (mid 11th - end of 15th century)- the formation of large feudal states and the growing importance of cities - centers of crafts, trade, and spiritual life, which became increasingly secular in nature.

III period (XV - mid-XVII century)- early modern times, the beginning of the decomposition of the feudal system. Characterized by the creation of colonial empires, the development of technical and economic activities, the spread of manufacturing, the complication of the social structure of society, which conflicts with the class division. The Reformation and Counter-Reformation mark a new stage in spiritual life. In conditions of growing social and religious contradictions, central power is strengthened and absolute monarchies arise.

Civilizations of the Ancient World and the Middle Ages within theories of "stages of growth" ( E. Toffler) are not differentiated , they are considered as "traditional society" the basis of the economy, life, culture, family structure and politics was the land, natural and semi-natural agricultural and craft farming. In all these countries, life was organized around the village settlement, there was a simple division of labor and clearly defined castes and classes: nobles, priests, warriors, slaves or serfs, and an authoritarian character of power.

Exceptions to the rules described above are considered as special variants of a single phenomenon - agrarian civilization.

Modern era - the era of the formation and establishment of industrial capitalist civilization.

1st period (from the middle of the 17th century)- a time of revolutions that destroyed the foundations of the class system (the first of them was the revolution in England in the 1640-1660s). The Age of Enlightenment was of great importance, associated with the spiritual emancipation of man and the acquisition of faith in the power of reason.

2nd period comes after Great French Revolution(1789-1794). Industrial Revolution, which began in England, covers the countries of continental Europe, where the formation of capitalist relations is proceeding at a rapid pace. This is a time of rapid growth of colonial empires, the world market, and the system of international division of labor. With the completion of the formation of large bourgeois states, the ideology of nationalism and national interest is established in most of them.

III period (from the end of the 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century)- the rapid development of industrial civilization “in breadth” is slowing down due to its development of new territories. The capacity of world markets turns out to be insufficient to absorb the growing volumes of products. The time of global crises of overproduction and the growth of social contradictions in industrial countries. Intensification of the struggle for the redivision of the world.

Contemporaries perceived this time as a period of crisis of industrial, capitalist civilization. The indicator was the First World War of 1914-1918. and the 1917 revolution in Russia.

Periodization and the term Recent history are considered controversial in modern science. For Soviet historians and philosophers, the revolution of 1917 marked the transition to the era of the formation of the communist formation; it was with it that the advent of modern times was associated. Proponents of other approaches to the periodization of history used the term “Modern Time” to mean a period associated with the history of modernity in the twentieth century.

Within the framework of the history of modern times, it stands out II main period.

1st period (first half of the twentieth century) - early modern times - the process of deepening the crisis of industrial civilization (the Great Crisis of 1929-1932) brought the economies of developed countries to the brink of collapse. Power rivalry, the struggle for colonies and markets for products led to World War II of 1939-1945. The colonial system of European powers is collapsing. The conditions of the Cold War are breaking the unity of the world market. With the invention of nuclear weapons, the crisis of industrial civilization began to threaten the destruction of humanity.

2nd period (second half - end of the twentieth century) - qualitative changes associated with changes in the nature of social, socio-political development of the leading countries of the world. With the spread of computers and industrial robots the nature of work is changing, The central figure of production becomes the intellectual worker. In developed countries it is developing socially oriented market economy, The nature of human life and leisure is changing. Integration processes are underway in the international arena, the creation of common economic spaces (Western European, North American), the development of processes of globalization of economic life and the creation of a global system of information communications.

Self-test questions:

1. What functions does historical science perform, what methods and principles does it use when studying historical facts and events?

2. What main stages has historical science gone through in its development? Name its leading schools and largest representatives.

3. What options for the periodization of historical development can you name? Which one seems most reasonable to you?

Charles Darwin's theory of evolution tells us when man appeared on Earth. This point of view is generally accepted among scientific researchers. Previously, people could not say for sure who created man. For thousands of years it was believed that humanity is the work of the gods, but the answer to the question of who created man is evolution.

In contact with

First representatives

Man appeared in ancient times in a completely different way from the way we can observe him now. The very first representative of our species did not look more like a monkey than a modern representative of human society. Some researchers believe that The first man was Australopithecus. Many criticize such assumptions, since he is really more similar to the lower class of primates. The next developmental milestone after Australopithecus was Homo habilis or “handy man.”

He walked on two legs and had a relatively upright posture. These people created the first tools to use them to obtain food and build housing. Modern archaeological discoveries have made it possible to establish the most accurate date when Homo habilis appeared on Earth. This happened approximately 2.6 million years ago.

Attention! The first representatives of our species on Earth were relatively short in stature. If now the average height of the average person is about 1.7 meters, then a skilled person was no higher than 1.2 meters.

Place of residence

Researchers are trying to determine where did the first settlement appear? of people. For many years it was believed that the human race originated in Western Europe.

The main reason for this is the theory of Eurocentrism, which said that it was on the territory of Europe that powerful civilizations were created, and it was from here that progress began.

In the second half of the twentieth century, archaeologists found the remains of that same Homo habilis in the territory of modern Tanzania, the so-called Afar Triangle.

It was there that key discoveries were made that shed light on the origins of humanity. Archaeologists found tools made of stone next to human bones, which could well serve as good tools. tool for obtaining food.

In 1960, few people had any doubts. Archaeological finds also made it clear how man developed, how the volume of his brain increased over time and intellectual activity improved.

As for the classification by period, the origin of humanity should be dated to the Cenozoic era, which began 65 million years ago. This period is referred to as the “era of new life,” because it started immediately after the fall of a huge meteorite, which destroyed the dinosaurs and most of life on the planet.

Process of evolution

We learned where man came from and what the very first man on earth was called, but the evolution of our species did not stop there - even more amazing changes were to come.

Homo ergaster

Approximately 1.8 million years ago, homo habilis evolved into a working person, that is, homo ergaster. The brain size of this species is significantly larger than homo habilis. Scientists believe that it was homo ergaster who acquired the ability to use spoken language.

Near the skeletons of Homo ergaster, archaeologists found traces of the first fire pits. Therefore, it is This species began to make fire for the first time. In addition, a working man invented a chopper.

Homo ergaster began to hunt animals more often, and until that moment the first people on Earth were more likely to be gatherers and scavengers. A fairly high level of intelligence allowed them to gather in groups that began to go hunting - this significantly increased the chances of survival and a successful ending.

Homo erectus

A previous species of man began to colonize the planet. From Africa, the first people on Earth went to Western Europe and Asia. It was in the Far East that the remains of the next stage in the development of the human race were found - homo erectus or erectus.

At this stage of human development, its typical representative had an average height of 1.4 m. Homo erectus no longer slouched, and walked straight. Still in use stone tools. People collected roots and plants, hunted medium and small game.

Since man in ancient times could not defend himself alone, erectuses began to gather into fairly large ancestral communities, which numbered several dozen people. Erectus were also the first to cook meat over a fire. At this stage of development, during periods of famine, people resorted to cannibalism.

For the first time, the beginnings of a relationship appeared between erectuses, reminiscent of a permanent married couple, but promiscuous sexual intercourse took advantage. Archaeological finds have also confirmed that erectus cared for wounded tribesmen and understood the medicinal properties of herbs.

Important! Perhaps even then there appeared people who were called shamans or healers.

Development of thinking

For a long time it was believed that Homo sapiens was the ancestor of Neanderthals.

However, research of the 20th century proved that Neanderthal man was a dead-end branch of development in Western Europe, and homo sapiens came from Africa. Moreover, it was he who exterminated and assimilated the Neanderthals.

Archaeologists have found that the first people with the rudiments of reason appeared approximately 350-250 thousand years ago.

Initially, homo sapiens were nomads and gatherers, and only 15 thousand years ago they began:

  • master agriculture,
  • make tools from bone,
  • build permanent homes,
  • establish small permanent settlements,
  • to sew clothes,
  • draw on cave walls.

10 thousand years ago, people communicated using speech, and gestures and facial expressions faded into the background.

At this stage of development, people first became create families and get married. The development of agriculture made it possible to preserve part of the production, which made possible the emergence of classes, power and the ability to survive in unfavorable times.

Homo sapiens domesticated animals, which gave impetus to the development of cattle breeding. This also made it easier to get food - there was no need to spend a huge amount of time and effort on hunting. At that time, trade arose between the tribes: some offered skins, while others offered beautiful shells or fish.

10 thousand years ago homo sapiens began to build cities, invented the first languages ​​and built civilizations in the Middle East, North Africa, India, and Latin America.

We traced how man developed throughout the entire period of evolution, where the first people appeared 2.5 million years ago, and how the evolutionary process continued, which continues to this day.

Modern scientific achievements have refuted the theory of the divine origin of man and strengthened the position of Darwinism. People, before becoming what they are now, have come a long way of evolution - from ape-like creatures to modern man of the information age.

In what period did the first people appear?

Stages of development of Homo sapiens on Earth

Conclusion

The first man appeared on the African continent, its homeland was the territory of modern Tanzania . Archaeologists call this region the Afar Triangle or “the cradle of humanity.” From Africa, small tribes of people began to settle throughout the planet, conquering Europe, Asia, and then Australia and America.