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The adoption of agriculture is often described as one of the most
fundamental revolutions in human history, the starting point for
urbanisation and specialisation. More recently the structure of the
Neolithic mind has been proposed as a new cognitive revolution,
separating us fundamentally from preceding hunter-gatherers.
Without doubting that the so-called Neolithic Revolution was
significant, it is important to question how we conceptualise it.
This book focuses on two themes central to creating a rounded
understanding of the transition: our understandings of
hunter-gatherer diversity and change over time, with emphasis on
the adoption of agriculture; and the relationships between our
understandings of the modern world, and ourselves, and the models
we impose on prehistory. The broad geographical perspective adopted
here allows important comparisons to be made between two primary
study areas, the Near East and Europe.
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