Ways Ancient Civilizations Were More Advanced Than You Think

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  • Опубліковано 31 тра 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 645

  • @Sideprojects
    @Sideprojects  15 днів тому +13

    Secure your privacy with Surfshark! Enter promo code SIDEPROJECTS for an extra 3 months free at Surfshark.deals/SIDEPROJECTS

    • @MCMXLVI
      @MCMXLVI 14 днів тому +1

      Simon!. Kids are baby goats!.

    • @clarencesmith2305
      @clarencesmith2305 14 днів тому +1

      Simon Whistler, look up the roman surgical instruments from a history channel video I saw years ago we are using the same style of surgical instruments today and they were doing cataract surgery back then.

    • @theod9548
      @theod9548 14 днів тому +1

      you should stop advertising vpn enabling netflix out of country, netflix as caught up with that a while back already.

    • @donnadees1971
      @donnadees1971 14 днів тому +1

      Do you mention MATH? Math, needs to be found …

  • @y-not
    @y-not 15 днів тому +286

    Some people would rather believe Aliens did it, than ancient civilizations managed it. Meanwhile 2000+ years ago, ancient Greeks calculated the size of Earths sphere, but 10% of the internet are convinced it's flat

    • @banksuvladimir
      @banksuvladimir 15 днів тому +18

      To be fair, they would rather believe that aliens did it because aliens=exciting, not so much because they’re skeptical of ancient humans

    • @EtaCarinaeSC
      @EtaCarinaeSC 15 днів тому +23

      flat brains see flat earth

    • @Chelo_CAP1891
      @Chelo_CAP1891 15 днів тому

      i believe aliens had something to do with our past...the pyramids are much much older than the Egyptians, who knows, maybe some hybrid civilization or aliens helped the humans back then build them like moving those 70 ton slabs within the pyramids etc...just a thought ! mainstream science would never admit such things bc it messes up everything we know

    • @rathersane
      @rathersane 14 днів тому +11

      Given that all of the civilizations influenced by ancient aliens were neolithic, the ancient aliens must have been like the Flintstones, but with flying saucers.

    • @phatphat7089
      @phatphat7089 14 днів тому +12

      ​@@rathersane That would make them the Jetsons!

  • @Cec9e13
    @Cec9e13 14 днів тому +129

    I absolutely adore this video. My dad has said regularly since I was a child, and I now say to my children, that people who give credit to aliens or magic based on new age stuff for things that ancient man did, they are saying our ancestors were stupid, which they were profoundly not. They were every bit as intelligent, they just had less of a knowledge base to draw from. They were PERFECTLY capable.

    • @michaelrichter9427
      @michaelrichter9427 14 днів тому +23

      Courtesy of the harsher environments they lived in, they may have actually been slightly more intelligent, on average, than we are.

    • @brocephas8553
      @brocephas8553 14 днів тому +6

      ​@@michaelrichter9427much more intelligent! We have an incredible knowledge base (their observations and calculations ARE that base) yet, on average, we fall somewhere between imbeciles and idiots in comparison.

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 13 днів тому

      I think there is an extremely high probability we have had alien interference and not because I think our ancestors were stupid but because of several aspects of very early history that don’t make sense. I find a lot of extremely well read people believe the same.

    • @Stang2023
      @Stang2023 13 днів тому +1

      Your dad lied.

    • @Stang2023
      @Stang2023 13 днів тому

      @@brocephas8553🙄

  • @AnUndivine
    @AnUndivine 14 днів тому +41

    There is actually a record from ancient Rome that seems to indicate they knew about micro-organisms.
    “Precautions must also be taken in the neighbourhood of swamps, both for the reasons given, and because there are bred certain minute creatures which cannot be seen by the eyes, which float in the air and enter the body through the mouth and nose and there cause serious diseases."
    Terentius Varro
    De Re Rustica, 1.12

    • @winstonknowitall4181
      @winstonknowitall4181 12 днів тому +1

      WOW!

    • @cotati76
      @cotati76 12 днів тому +4

      I love Terentius movies. He’s a great writer and director.

    • @joshuahunt3032
      @joshuahunt3032 5 днів тому +2

      Yeah, kinda makes one wonder if the Romans were closer to developing Germ Theory or old-fashioned Miasma Theory.

    • @caryeverett8914
      @caryeverett8914 5 днів тому +4

      ​@@joshuahunt3032 If microscopes haven't been invented, is there really that much of a practical difference between Germ Theory and Miasma Theory? Miasma is not correct but it is an astonishingly good approximation.

    • @Iceechibi
      @Iceechibi 2 дні тому +1

      ​@@caryeverett8914i mean past peoples understood that air can become contaminated from other things, just not really knowing the source, however, knowing the air was bad. There are several Indian scientists from the Golden Age of India (300 - 600 CE) that knew about some form of germ theory and how regular washing of hands, feet and face along with regular bathing helped reduce disease.

  • @l4zrh4wk
    @l4zrh4wk 13 днів тому +8

    Former district nurse here. We use honey with necrotic wounds, it has pretty amazing antibacterial properties. Silver and seaweed dressings also. Not to mention maggot therapy.

  • @glasshalffull2930
    @glasshalffull2930 14 днів тому +21

    It always got me thinking of the possibilities when I consider my grandfather, who was born in 1892, saw the first airplanes take flight and then witnessed man landing on the moon.

  • @rflameng
    @rflameng 14 днів тому +20

    There is evidence that the Egyptians had at the very least a working knowledge of the Pythagorean theorem. They used a string of length a+b+c to make right angles, with a = 3 units, b = 4 units, and c = 5 units. As a²+b²=c², if the loop is closed, the angle where a touches b must be 90°. Simple and effective.

  • @swaggery
    @swaggery 15 днів тому +68

    I think all of this goes to show how much innovation can be achieved if you give people the resources to not constantly work and be able to think for a little bit.

    • @averagejoe6971
      @averagejoe6971 14 днів тому +8

      That, my friend, is what i call "problem solving skills". Rushing through a project leads to error(s) in my experience. I bet they were ALOT more patient back then hahahahahahaha

    • @wstavis3135
      @wstavis3135 14 днів тому +1

      You think they didn't work? Are you that daft or that lazy?

    • @cmacvane
      @cmacvane 14 днів тому

      You should start a company. 😂

    • @no_step_on_snek9796
      @no_step_on_snek9796 14 днів тому +4

      I agree 100%. People were free back then. They didn't have tech and HVAC but they also lived their lives as free people instead of being wage slaves for computers and creature comforts like we do today. Necessity is the mother of invention, and they had a lot of both.

    • @swaggery
      @swaggery 14 днів тому +9

      @@no_step_on_snek9796 there were farmers. Obviously the people inventing stuff back then are all well off for their time. I'm just saying almost anybody could have came to come up with those innovations given the time and resources. Things today we think are so crazy people back then have done.
      Plus fun fact they did have HVAC back then. Air conditioning existed thousands of years ago.

  • @johnchedsey1306
    @johnchedsey1306 14 днів тому +54

    I live in the US southwest region and I'm constantly amazed by the ancient dwellings that have survived hundreds or even a thousand years, such as Mesa Verde. Also building them halfway down cliffs is astounding. It makes practical sense for shelter and protection from enemies/animals, but it couldn't have been easy.

    • @patriciafeehan7732
      @patriciafeehan7732 14 днів тому +7

      Mesa Verde is on my bucket list.

    • @tonyrainbolt9388
      @tonyrainbolt9388 11 днів тому +1

      I've been to Mesa Verde twice. It is an amazing place. I have never doubted that there was ancient actual knowledge, but this video is a keeper!

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 14 днів тому +22

    1:00 - Mid roll ads
    2:25 - Chapter 1 - Mathematics
    5:25 - Chapter 2 - The earth & astronomy
    10:10 - Chapter 3 - City engineering
    12:00 - Chapter 4 - Medicine

    • @omegaprime516
      @omegaprime516 14 днів тому +4

      This should be pinned instead of the stupid comments at the top.

  • @yankeevictor9055
    @yankeevictor9055 15 днів тому +125

    Impressive, but it still took until one generation ago to find a way to avoid going to school uphill both ways.

    • @Chad_Thundernuts
      @Chad_Thundernuts 14 днів тому +8

      What a time to be alive.

    • @phaedrapage4217
      @phaedrapage4217 14 днів тому +3

      My two teenage godsons would dispute that.

    • @rb-pk8ds
      @rb-pk8ds 14 днів тому +7

      In the snow, everyday!!

    • @bannankev
      @bannankev 14 днів тому +1

      Yeah I was gonna say I was always told it was in the snow. But I’m from up north so guess that only applies to us 🤣 💜

    • @inhumanfilth681
      @inhumanfilth681 14 днів тому +1

      How does one avoid a hill

  • @justincapone
    @justincapone 14 днів тому +9

    “No aliens necessary, it’s just human ingenuity.”
    I’m taking that quote

  • @Onora619
    @Onora619 15 днів тому +156

    When Simon is 70, I hope he has a Merlin beard.

    • @gingataisen
      @gingataisen 14 днів тому +14

      And a big pointy hat.

    • @mentalshatter
      @mentalshatter 14 днів тому +5

      He hates fantasy, so I doubt that'll happen.

    • @dribz3b29
      @dribz3b29 14 днів тому +2

      Just like sword in the stone!! Hawaii shirt and long grey beard.

    • @oltedders
      @oltedders 14 днів тому

      It's finally gotten to the point that I don't have to go on Pornhub every time I see Simon.

    • @beverleybee1309
      @beverleybee1309 14 днів тому +4

      He'd look absolutely awesome.

  • @CortexNewsService
    @CortexNewsService 14 днів тому +23

    Can you imagine how advanced we'd be if he didn't have to keep rediscovering this stuff?

  • @martinsachs3837
    @martinsachs3837 15 днів тому +159

    The importance of Pi can't be overestimated.
    Strawberry is my favorite.

  • @tonycosta3302
    @tonycosta3302 15 днів тому +100

    Ancient people were just like us, just without the smartphones and dentistry.

    • @jonathanhirschbaum6754
      @jonathanhirschbaum6754 15 днів тому +23

      YOu might want to google egyptian dentistry

    • @douglasbillington8521
      @douglasbillington8521 15 днів тому +3

      ​@@jonathanhirschbaum6754they had dentures, but other than that, still pretty bad comparatively.

    • @drstevej2527
      @drstevej2527 15 днів тому

      Wrong!

    • @TheinternetArchaeologist
      @TheinternetArchaeologist 14 днів тому +2

      To be fair they had smoke signals and Ash tooth paste and as we all know that is nature's smartphone and oral hygiene just as good... Hey if you've got a cut you can make your own Band-Aid it's this nifty thing called a pulposus and if you're regular you make the main ingredient every day all natural

    • @ruobe1
      @ruobe1 14 днів тому +1

      If not for them some of wouldn’t be here

  • @sithonsithon1012
    @sithonsithon1012 14 днів тому +17

    I'm surprised he didn't bring up Roman concrete.

    • @bythelee
      @bythelee 14 днів тому

      Limited time, almost unlimited source material... He had to pick and choose the "biggies", and the more ancient the more remarkable.
      But yeah, Roman concrete is a good one. That material is still standing today.

    • @cotati76
      @cotati76 12 днів тому

      @@bytheleethere are some good videos about Roman concrete out there. I’ll never understand why so many people want to insult our ancestors by basically saying they were stupid when they clearly weren’t. Since the dawn of humanity there have been very smart people out there.

  • @the-chillian
    @the-chillian 14 днів тому +10

    If Columbus had used Eratosthanes' figure for the size of the Earth, he wouldn't have set out at all. The existence of America was unknown to Europeans at the time. For all they knew, there was nothing but open ocean all the way across to Japan and China. There was no way for ships of the period to make such a long voyage all at a go. This was, in fact, the essence of the dispute between himself and accepted scholarship, and why he found it so hard to get his voyage financed despite the wealth that would have been brought by success.

    • @caryeverett8914
      @caryeverett8914 5 днів тому

      Columbus was an idiot who nearly got himself and his crew killed and was only saved by accidentally discovering a continent that he didn't realize existed. Which he thought was India because he openly rejected the scientific consensus regarding the circumference of Earth and was insisting the Earth was 1/3rd the size it actually was.

  • @young_dieg0301
    @young_dieg0301 14 днів тому +7

    Reminder, Babylonians had the approximation of the value of square root of two since the 2nd Millenium BC, and sumerians from the 3rd millenium had division, multiplication and geometrical excercises

    • @xxxterm
      @xxxterm 11 днів тому

      Sumerians invented just about everything

  • @kryan1234567890
    @kryan1234567890 15 днів тому +54

    Simon without sleeves got me all sorts of f*cked up right now… get this man a turtleneck sweater!!

    • @negativeindustrial
      @negativeindustrial 15 днів тому +10

      It’s like seeing your teacher at the grocery store.

    • @Borninthe9ties
      @Borninthe9ties 15 днів тому

      Why?

    • @charnevo8477
      @charnevo8477 15 днів тому +2

      It's partly funny because i'm wondering why someone starts to wear a tshirt when winter is starting, then i remember he is in the northern hemisphere

    • @artharrison9586
      @artharrison9586 15 днів тому +2

      Hey! Hey! He’s working hard in these bits! You can almost see a sheen of sweat….

    • @HockeyStickDefence
      @HockeyStickDefence 15 днів тому

      @@negativeindustrial 11:17

  • @Anti_Woke
    @Anti_Woke 14 днів тому +4

    "Standing on the shoulders of giants" and all that. There are a lot of things people today can re-learn from the past, but I've always maintained it's whoever did or invented something first, from first principles, who deserves the real praise.

  • @gregheiden9986
    @gregheiden9986 15 днів тому +18

    There is only 149 years between the discovery of Antarctica, and landing a man on the moon.

    • @ConcreteLand
      @ConcreteLand 14 днів тому +1

      How is one relevant to the other?

    • @gregheiden9986
      @gregheiden9986 14 днів тому +9

      @@ConcreteLand exploration, technologies' ramp up in the last 200 years.

    • @olencone4005
      @olencone4005 14 днів тому +3

      Even cooler, it was just 66 years between the first man to fly an aircraft at Kitty Hawk and the first man to walk on the Moon ^_^

    • @looptimelapse
      @looptimelapse 14 днів тому

      Antartica was not "discovered" 150 years ago budd ..people have been sailing far and away much before that

    • @jasmijnariel
      @jasmijnariel 9 днів тому

      There is only 39y in between me popping in existance and this vid😂
      Isnt that crazy?

  • @caseymcadams5483
    @caseymcadams5483 10 днів тому +2

    Pythagoras was not made famous for discovering the Pythagorean properties of triangles. Instead he was made famous for making the first geometric proof of the property. Thus proving it holds for all right triangles and paving the way for mathematical proofs

  • @aaronlawrence666
    @aaronlawrence666 15 днів тому +16

    Just a note that when the Maya was first mentioned it was Teotihuacan was shown. It’s in Mexico but it’s not a Mayan city.

    • @TheFlizash
      @TheFlizash 14 днів тому +3

      Aztec

    • @thesis7628
      @thesis7628 14 днів тому +7

      @@TheFlizash Not aztec, teotihuacanan, they predate the aztects in central mexico.

    • @Fr3nchFlag
      @Fr3nchFlag 12 днів тому

      Most people don’t know the difference between Aztec, Maya and other Meso American cultures.

  • @michaeldiogenesbest6127
    @michaeldiogenesbest6127 15 днів тому +11

    I believe it was Socrates who said: "All Knowledge is Remembering"......

  • @phaedrapage4217
    @phaedrapage4217 14 днів тому +4

    The Egyptian use of honey on wounds is very impressive, it's still used in modern medicine.

  • @masternecro3511
    @masternecro3511 15 днів тому +242

    But... the past was the worst...

    • @kennylynch9317
      @kennylynch9317 15 днів тому +12

      Necessary comment lol

    • @victoriaeads6126
      @victoriaeads6126 15 днів тому +13

      Both. Both are true 😂

    • @blazzmatazz9051
      @blazzmatazz9051 15 днів тому +16

      90s were pretty great. 90-99AD

    • @donaldwert7137
      @donaldwert7137 15 днів тому +5

      @@victoriaeads6126 Kind of like "time heals all wounds" and "absence makes the heart grow fonder".

    • @denverparsons7330
      @denverparsons7330 15 днів тому +2

      Came here to comment this haha

  • @danidavis7912
    @danidavis7912 14 днів тому +4

    Wow! Eratosthenes and his crew were definitely at the top of their game! Amazing stuff.

  • @no_step_on_snek9796
    @no_step_on_snek9796 14 днів тому +4

    History is so important. It's constantly agitated that it might have to repeat itself because we don't listen.

    • @burkec33
      @burkec33 14 днів тому

      A never-ending cycle of ignorance triumphing over intelligence and then having to start over. During many revolutions, it's not the idiots whom are targeted but usually the thinkers. It has affected civilizations to this day.

  • @erikn.7540
    @erikn.7540 14 днів тому +18

    The prehistoric cave paintings in southern France became animated under firelight.
    The paintings were done up to the ceilings of these caves, which go up to 10 feet in height.

    • @bythelee
      @bythelee 14 днів тому +2

      I think you are describing Chauvet Cave - immortalised in a magnificent 2010 documentary movie by Werner Hertzog called "Cave of Forgotten Dreams". Anybody wanting a mind-blowing bit of armchair tourist culture should take a look. (Streaming services, UA-cam...) These cave drawings were done some 32,000 years ago - twice as old as anything else ever discovered. Animals such as horses and rhinoceros are readily identifiable. And far more realistic than anything most people could draw today, never mind the animation and 3D effects. The artistry is so good, they might have been drawn yesterday. Except for the layers of calcite over the top, that provides the dating information. Calcite deposits cannot be rushed...

    • @arminhanik7229
      @arminhanik7229 14 днів тому

      And this has what exactly to with the current episode?

    • @DneilB007
      @DneilB007 12 днів тому

      @@arminhanik7229Just one more data point.

  • @leemastro9904
    @leemastro9904 13 днів тому +1

    In ancient Rome, there were physicians/surgeons that were able to perform cataract surgery, without killing the patient, or blinding them. In fact, the patients not only survived, but were able to see clearly again.

  • @EmbeddedSorcery
    @EmbeddedSorcery 14 днів тому +3

    That last point is still good to remember when we are so isolated from other parts of the world seen as adversaries... Billions of people not normally collaborating day to day is a huge waste.

  • @lancebon2931
    @lancebon2931 9 днів тому +1

    Even earlier the knowledge of stone and what could be done with it is extraordinary, Pre-pottery knowledge of working with stone, still cannot be explained. From making cups and bowls to moving megalithic stonework, not to mention the precision that was used to create these objects. Our ancestors made good and creative use of what was around them. I was a seaman in the engine room on merchant ships in the late 60s, when something broke or stopped working, there was no place to go for parts or tools, we had to use what we had around us, or in a worst-case scenario have to abandon ship or even die.(In march 1966 in the North Sea after leaving Bremerhaven a rupture in the hall in the 5th cargo bay was letting sea water flood the the cargo space. The engineers on that ship worked and did some strange emergency fixes that saved our ship. They used what we had. Our ancestors did the same, they were wonderful and creative problem solvers.

  • @quadcannon
    @quadcannon 14 днів тому +5

    Sad you didn’t go over Hattusa and it’s incredible pipe water system.

  • @robertbrowning7556
    @robertbrowning7556 14 днів тому +1

    Very nice compilations of early advanced technologies.
    You mentioned communication towards closing, an excellent point, since it is in sharing and recording information we are able to pass on our advances to the next generation.
    During Alexander the Great's time, the Greeks also took advantage of the parabola to create the acoustic amplifiers and reflectors to communicate from mountain top to mountain top. A few of the rare examples to still exist were in Afghanistan and Macedonia, and still work when we tried them on deployment. Wonder why that idea was not continues and expanded back then?
    A modern equivalent would be the acoustic range detectors used in 1939 and 1940 Britain to track incoming raids. Radar of course soon surpassed that system but it did exist even in the 20th century.
    Excellent series and articles, Simon and crew!
    Thank you for making and posting them!

  • @gabbyn978
    @gabbyn978 14 днів тому +1

    There are more egyptian papyri with medical content, like the Papyrus Ebers, which is kept in the library of the University of Leipzig. It contains generally the same set of advice and diagnostic methods as described in the Papyrus of Edwin Smith, but also adds a few magical prayers for a "medicine". The Edward Smith papyrus is the one among them, that omits such supernatural components.

  • @harlanabraham7772
    @harlanabraham7772 14 днів тому +3

    Another Simon Whistler production. Yay. Good that aliens weren't necessary for construction projects. Very interesting.

  • @vic028
    @vic028 14 днів тому +2

    0:59 - yes. can you imagine people navigated by paper maps and mapquest before gps?

  • @MissBlueEyeliner
    @MissBlueEyeliner 9 днів тому

    I can’t stop imagining Fact Boi silently screaming “THE PAST WAS THE WORST!” as his software glitches.

  • @alexritchie4586
    @alexritchie4586 8 днів тому

    More people should know about Heron of Alexandria (C1st AD) who invented programmable wagons, vending machines, the hydraulic telegraph, automatic doors, the steam engine, the syringe, wind powered machines, and even constructed and directed an entirely automatic play.

  • @Jamesssssssssssssss
    @Jamesssssssssssssss 4 години тому

    "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair"

  • @jbblue48089
    @jbblue48089 14 днів тому

    My intro to philosophy professor spent more than half the semester on Plato and Pythagoras (since philosophers theorized about maths and science in order to understand the universe) and the amount of stuff I learned in that class about ancient knowledge was staggering.

  • @sirsir9665
    @sirsir9665 12 днів тому

    Navigation by stars is always mind-blowing and to think did it all the time

  • @wayneisanamerican
    @wayneisanamerican 15 днів тому +14

    Just looking around me, today, I would wager that they were on the whole, more intelligent than we are....

    • @trnogger
      @trnogger 14 днів тому

      That is just as much a fallacy as the assumption that ancients were dumber than us. For every Pythagoras, there were tens of thousands who couldn't have figured out how to plow a field without someone showing them. Not to mention the fact that we have general literacy, which is a quite recent development and makes even the dumbest of our days more educated and trained in systematic thinking than the majority of humanity just a few hundred years ago.

    • @bythelee
      @bythelee 14 днів тому +1

      I found the opening scenes from "Idiocracy" to be an excellent explanation of why the human race is almost certainly on a current "dumbward trajectory".
      When I look around, I feel my elders are generally better educated and more aware of things than the youth of today. Wisdom comes with age... or does it?
      There is a danger that attention and learning has become highly focussed on "the wrong things". Like, celebrity and soap opera and fashion and drama... Having status symbols like the right smartphone and trainers have become "important", and can consume far too much time. Leaving too little for what used to be considered important.

    • @Sarah_D.
      @Sarah_D. 13 днів тому +2

      I blame the internet. In the before times, the "village idiot" generally kept their idiocy within said village. Now, thanks to the internet, all the idiots from all the villages from all over the world have instant and constant contact with each other at all times. And, as the saying goes, never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.

    • @trnogger
      @trnogger 13 днів тому

      @@bythelee Those elders just had different status symbols. Cars instead of trainers, expensive watches instead of smartphones. And they were the ones who invented those distractions in the first place. And life experience is a great thing when the world doesn't change that much, but in a world where computers went from rare furniture-sized luxury items to pocket-sized commodities, where information broadcast technology went from challenging to operate for countries to in the hands of most children, where Europe went from a divided continent to a almost borderless union - and all of that within one generation - experience becomes more of an obstacle than an advantage. Today's youth knows way more and can do way more than any generation before them and the elders struggle every day to keep up. And I say that as someone who has been around for more than two generations already.

  • @dalefirmin5118
    @dalefirmin5118 14 днів тому +3

    I heard that the ancient Egyptians used 22/7, which is 3.1429 and much closer to the real value of pi. Other mathematicians calculated fractions that were even closer.

    • @vulcanfeline
      @vulcanfeline 14 днів тому

      idk about ancient egyptians, but my ancient dad, who would be 101 this year, used 22/7

    • @UteChewb
      @UteChewb 11 днів тому

      There are a lot of such numbers. A favourite of mine is 355 / 113. Very close to pi, though a long time ago I memorised pi to 15 places and now it is stuck in my head.

  • @stax6092
    @stax6092 15 днів тому +14

    "Given more priority than the Residences of the Elite", Damn I wish we was like that.

    • @paullowman9131
      @paullowman9131 14 днів тому +4

      We would be better off, no doubt.

    • @ajstevens1652
      @ajstevens1652 14 днів тому +5

      Imagine if our resources were dedicated to science and medicine instead of mansions and yachts for the rich.

    • @tubensalat1453
      @tubensalat1453 14 днів тому +2

      @@ajstevens1652 Don't forget "security" and "defense"; which somehow usually create an even bigger spending on "security" and "defense".

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 13 днів тому

      @@ajstevens1652our resources go to what we convince society is important.

  • @alm5992
    @alm5992 10 днів тому

    "They certainly had more knowledge than they had wrote down."
    Jeez, Simon is so loaded from his 100 channels that he has a time machine now to confirm his statements!

  • @user-ei3yu9dn2u
    @user-ei3yu9dn2u 14 днів тому +1

    Liu Hui was the 3.14 mathematician. Zu Chongzhi was the 3.1415926 mathematician.

  • @aggressivederangedhobo
    @aggressivederangedhobo 14 днів тому +1

    I miss the less cerebral Simon. I remember when it was "I'm Simon from WhatCulture and these are the 10 best Jock Strap Related Incidents from the WCW era"

  • @newshodgepodge6329
    @newshodgepodge6329 13 днів тому +1

    "Medical honey" is still used for wound care even now.

  • @c.m.4313
    @c.m.4313 8 днів тому

    Ancient ship building was super impressive

  • @jankybit
    @jankybit 15 днів тому +1

    this is fantastically interesting. I don't think this is talked about nearly enough!

  • @miguelm6794
    @miguelm6794 2 дні тому

    Say what you will about the bagpipes, they are ancient! Anyone who looked at a sheep and thought “musical instrument” was thinking waaaaaaay outside the box. Scary brilliant.
    (I’m a novice piper)

  • @bazoo513
    @bazoo513 13 днів тому +1

    I think that inventions by Heron of Alexandria, especially those related to use of steam, albeit relatively recent (1st century AD) should have been mentioned. In different social and economic environment they could have started the industrial revolution 1500 years before is actually started.

  • @TexJester-no8th
    @TexJester-no8th 14 днів тому +7

    THANK YOU for using AD and BC !!! Makes SO much more sense ....
    I'm now 60 years old. I have been saying for decades that the Ancients were FAR smarter than we ever give them credit for.

    • @EllieMaes-Grandad
      @EllieMaes-Grandad 14 днів тому +1

      BC and AD define the years of Our Lord. Reject "common era" stuff (CE & BCE).

    • @michaelrichter9427
      @michaelrichter9427 14 днів тому +2

      @@EllieMaes-Grandad Your Lord. Not mine. Not, in fact, the Lord of the majority of the planet's inhabitants.
      CE and BCE, thank you very much.

    • @vulcanfeline
      @vulcanfeline 14 днів тому

      @@EllieMaes-Grandad BC refers to Before Ceasar, and AD is Ante Domino (sp?) which means after Dominion. btw, it was Ceasar who invented the currently used calendar. it's just coinidence that the mythical figure of Jesus was supposedly born at this time

  • @stancil83
    @stancil83 14 днів тому

    Thank you for this video! You can only hear about the horrible things people do for so long before it's all you think about. It happens too often in the media. Hearing about the great accomplishments of mankind is one of my favorite pastimes.

  • @bythelee
    @bythelee 14 днів тому

    I concluded that our ancient ancestors were way smarter than anticipated during a holiday tour of Ireland.
    When assessing the flagstone shallow pit that could have been a small grave, but filled with bog water, it became obvious that the Irish were having hot baths some 10,000 years ago.
    These things (fulacht fiadh = "full ach fear") could heat 40 gallons of water to boiling point in about 20 minutes. By dropping in hot stones, roasted in a nearby fire. How simple! Yet, how clever!
    We know they were used for cooking (boiling meat and veg for the original Irish Stew perhaps) but the shape and size also makes them perfect for bathing, too.

  • @williamhardes8081
    @williamhardes8081 13 днів тому

    fun fact, the Egyptians also prescribed the use of "Mary jane" or "420" as a broncho-dilator to aid with flu, pneumonia and asthma.

  • @aRealAndHumanManThing
    @aRealAndHumanManThing 15 днів тому +5

    perfect timing! Waiting for my oven cheese rn and this banger dropped

    • @jennarose8729
      @jennarose8729 15 днів тому +1

      Oven cheese? Like you just put some cheese on a tray in the oven and cook it??

    • @craigstoner2632
      @craigstoner2632 15 днів тому

      Seriously, do you just cook cheese and call it a meal???

    • @JGGeorgie
      @JGGeorgie 15 днів тому

      WE NEED ANSWERS DAMN IT

    • @gaahlmccartney
      @gaahlmccartney 15 днів тому +1

      I need more info on this oven cheese this is way more important than some civilization from like a billion years ago

    • @tubensalat1453
      @tubensalat1453 14 днів тому +1

      Oven cheese is great! I've got two in the fridge, pro'ly having one tomorrow.
      For those that don't know: they come in a wooden form and you bake it until it is mostly fluid, with a nice crust on top; with nice bread it's delicious.

  • @readtruth6670
    @readtruth6670 14 днів тому +1

    Hunter/gatherers have absolutely no need for a precise calendar. That’s A LOT of work for a novelty item.

  • @larzlarz1140
    @larzlarz1140 12 днів тому +1

    The biggest stumbling block for them was medicine. The physical sciences were pretty advanced: math, engineering, and astronomy. But the people were not living past their 30’s or 40’s, which prevented that gained knowledge from propelling them even further. Medicine has proven to be the toughest nut to crack. Even in the modern era, it is way harder to cure diabetes or cancer than it is to make an iPhone, a self driving car or to make a space station.

    • @jamesengland7461
      @jamesengland7461 8 днів тому

      Well, on average people weren't living very long, but individuals have always been living to a hundred or longer.

  • @alanwolenskyii9561
    @alanwolenskyii9561 13 днів тому

    I want Simon to turn into The Wise Old Man when he gets older. Blue Phat and all, lol.

  • @lessanderfer7195
    @lessanderfer7195 14 днів тому

    There are 13 Lunar Months, we use a Solar Calendar with 12 months.
    "The months of the Gregorian calendar do not correspond to the moon's phases, but the calendar does have leap years to account for the Earth's revolution being slightly longer than 365 days. "
    "Yes, the lunar calendar has 13 months, each with 28 days. The moon takes about 28 days to orbit the Earth, so in one year, the moon completes 13 orbits. The Celtic lunar calendar is an example of a 13-month calendar, with an extra day added at the end of the year."

  • @theawesomeman9821
    @theawesomeman9821 12 днів тому

    Simon should have mentioned the Mesapotamian Battery, the earliest known battery discovered within the Sumerians ruins in Babylon, Iraq.

  • @ahmedshaharyarejaz9886
    @ahmedshaharyarejaz9886 8 днів тому

    We are all truly blessed to be living in the Modern world.

  • @ulin4226
    @ulin4226 9 днів тому

    The Romans began to settle around 15BC in the area today known as Xanten in Germany. They had running water and a function sewer system, a public bath house with under-floor steam heating and water flushed latrines. They had figured out that it is not a good idea to poop into one’s fresh water supply! Then came the ‘Dark Ages’, during which more than 1/3 of Europe’s population died from diseases caused by unsanitary conditions! 😮

  • @cotati76
    @cotati76 12 днів тому

    I thank god everyday that I’ll never have to do the quadratic equation or factor polynomials ever again.

  • @lady_draguliana784
    @lady_draguliana784 11 днів тому

    Honey doesn't go bad... period... one must dilute it to the point that it's merely an 'ingredient' in a concoction in order for the honey to 'go bad'. preserving food in honey goes back MUCH farther than recorded history. This property is it's whole purpose for the bees, and it makes _perfect_ logical sense that an infected wound; being likened to a cut of meat 'going bad', which isn't far off; might be aided by the "preserving properties" they'd directly observed.
    Never underestimate the power of Direct Observation!

  • @ursulap.6722
    @ursulap.6722 14 днів тому

    5:41 Imagine a guy named Warren Field coming across this part of the video, lol

  • @cheapskatecoins5709
    @cheapskatecoins5709 14 днів тому

    Just a suggestion, you should consider working on the ending of your videos putting in some kind of short close instead of just leaving an abrupt end that leaves us wondering if part of the video got cut off.

  • @CampCooperator
    @CampCooperator 12 днів тому

    Honestly, look at all the historic buildings and then tell me the ancestors or even another civilization hadn't some technology we're not known to. I think it has to do with frequencies, sound, water and magnetic fields. Like the Pyramids are today known that they served as a battery and I think the historic building style also kind of uses the same mechanism. Probably has to do with "free energy" something that Tesla talked about.

  • @JasonErdmann
    @JasonErdmann 6 днів тому

    I’m guessing most ancient Egyptians didn’t know linear algebra and how to solve quadratic equations, just like most people today do not.

  • @saragandey8625
    @saragandey8625 15 днів тому +2

    Fascinating video thank you

  • @Jayjay-qe6um
    @Jayjay-qe6um 14 днів тому

    The history of mathematics is an ever-growing series of abstractions. Evolutionarily speaking, the first abstraction to ever be discovered, one shared by many animals, was probably that of numbers: the realization that, for example, a collection of two apples and a collection of two oranges (say) have something in common, namely that there are two of them. As evidenced by tallies found on bone, in addition to recognizing how to count physical objects, prehistoric peoples may have also known how to count abstract quantities, like time--days, seasons, or years.

  • @namelesscare7982
    @namelesscare7982 11 днів тому +1

    Ancient Egypt and Greece were the most prominent ones. These two civilizations laid out the foundation of many scientific methods and inventions. Especially ancient Greece was much more advanced in many ways.

  • @alexhurst3986
    @alexhurst3986 14 днів тому

    My nephew loves to go hiking and camping. At my suggestion he keeps packages of honey in his first aid kit and has actually used them on occasion. Science! Also. It absolutely amazes me that people assume ancients were less intelligent or advanced. All of our scientists, engineers, inventors, etc, and all of our gadgets had to come from somewhere. This stuff didn't just pop into existence out of the ether.

  • @LebaneseJesus
    @LebaneseJesus 14 днів тому +1

    Lui Hui … ‘cut’ 4:58

  • @RobBulmahn
    @RobBulmahn 14 днів тому +1

    You keep missing one syllable: EraTOSthenese, not Erasthenes.

  • @flareinc7413
    @flareinc7413 7 днів тому

    These sorts of videos are super interesting :O

  • @MrEnjoivolcom1
    @MrEnjoivolcom1 14 днів тому

    Happy birthday week Simon!!!

  • @reclawyxhush
    @reclawyxhush 4 дні тому

    Fascinating (not in the least due to not saying a word about the Aliens). But why so much so advanced knowledge got lost to the rough times erasing what might have driven civilization so much further than we see today? One simple answer comes to mind and it's exclusivity of knowledge. For for knowledge to survive it's of utmost importance to be replicated and reproduced on a massive scale.

  • @MichaelBrandonMcCartney
    @MichaelBrandonMcCartney 14 днів тому

    The papyrus at 5,000 years old is nowhere near the age of the pyramids

  • @nomaschalupas2453
    @nomaschalupas2453 13 днів тому

    we will never be as good at math again because math is more and more being done for us by computers. once the language of computers was created, math was saved on a memory card outside of our brains.

  • @-D3D3
    @-D3D3 12 днів тому

    I'm still waiting for the "how many channels does Simon Whistler have" episode...lol

  • @bmanlexie4875
    @bmanlexie4875 14 днів тому

    The ancients had our intelligence but not our knowledge and unfortunately knowledge can be lost. An episode on the times that our knowledge was lost and set us back in our technological development would be great. Ignorance is not stupidity.

    • @SavageEntertainmentYEAH
      @SavageEntertainmentYEAH 11 днів тому

      Yes typically the worst parts of history were due to ignorance either by subduing knowledge from the poor classes or wars destroying knowledge over time which set civilizations back for a bit

  • @DiegoSepulveda09
    @DiegoSepulveda09 14 днів тому

    Hey! Just wanted to say that the firsr picture you show of the Mayans at 9:18 is actually of Teotihuacan, which is a completely different culture. Just thought you should know :)

  • @MitchLJay
    @MitchLJay 14 днів тому

    The ancient egyptian way of finding out the sex of your child before birth is something that always amazes me...

  • @JesseJoyce-cj2xg
    @JesseJoyce-cj2xg 14 днів тому +2

    Given some of his apparent attempts at the Greek names in this video, I’m starting to believe that Simon actually is purposefully butchering words to elicit more viewer engagement in the comments (you’re welcome, btw).

  • @dralberthofmann
    @dralberthofmann 6 днів тому

    Imagine how much more advanced we could be now if we didn’t have wars and other upheavals regularly causing loss of knowledge and regressing us.

  • @user-il8sk7do3x
    @user-il8sk7do3x 14 днів тому

    Buddy that discovered the circumference of Earth wild bro how you Even come up with the ideas to look at they shadow!! That's crazy genius

  • @CCKaraoke
    @CCKaraoke 9 днів тому

    Ancient civilizations had a major advantage over us in astronomy because they could actually see the night sky.

  • @stephenphillips4609
    @stephenphillips4609 14 днів тому

    I find ancient discoveries and technology utterly fascinating, not least because they worked without our resources of knowledge and technology. It's only one reason why the ancient aliens rubbish is so contemptible.

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 13 днів тому

    Did they have no knowledge of microorganisms?
    I read about someone who purposed a germ theory of disease almost exactly like our modern theory. They pointed out than animals had sizes as small as the limits of the ability for humans to see and proposed there was no reason to believe that these were the smallest animals that existed.
    He tested this idea by cleaning surfaces with the intention of killing these animals that were too small to see, and he did note a lower incident of disease.
    However he did not have magnification technology so he could never prove this theory.

  • @jeffreyrobinson3555
    @jeffreyrobinson3555 10 днів тому

    Pi doesn’t have a real value
    We always use an approximation
    We can figure in to billions of places but it never ends

  • @MarkH10
    @MarkH10 15 днів тому +1

    THEY had it rough? We used to go get our own groceries instead of delivery, and when I started school we only had black and white TV.

  • @MikefromQueens
    @MikefromQueens 14 днів тому +1

    What eyeglass frames are those?

  • @MrG9002
    @MrG9002 11 днів тому

    Simon's beard is becoming it's own being.

  • @jimwalker5412
    @jimwalker5412 14 днів тому

    How can Simon talk soooo fast without making a mistake, I only do that when I'm drunk, honest😂😂😂

    • @tubensalat1453
      @tubensalat1453 14 днів тому

      Maybe the editors for his more serious channels don't revel in his mistakes as much as they do on brain blaze for example.

  • @stefanc4520
    @stefanc4520 14 днів тому +1

    Ancient people is us, we are them.

  • @hi-fidude6670
    @hi-fidude6670 12 днів тому

    Egypt deserves far more credit than Mesopotamia. These guys are truly the inventors of complex society beyond just farming all day.