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(Recommended)Popular Videos : [TED] Why are these 32 symbols found in caves all over Europe | Genevieve von Petzinger

 

This time, I will review the popular YouTube videos.

These days, even if it's good to watch on YouTube, sometimes people skip it or don't watch it if it's too long.

When you watch Youtube, do you scroll and read the comments first?

To save your busy time, why don't you check out the fun contents, summary, and empathy comments of popular YouTube videos first and watch YouTube?

(Recommended)Popular Videos : [TED] Why are these 32 symbols found in caves all over Europe | Genevieve von Petzinger

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hJnEQCMA5Sg

 

 

Playtime Comments : [TED] Why are these 32 symbols found in caves all over Europe | Genevieve von Petzinger

ti***********:

6:47 So they were sending emojis to each other? And now we are returning to that communication :)


Da*********:

7:40 they were clearly trying to make windows.....


MF*********:
8:21 I look forward to the day when a cough like that doesn't stand out anymore.

Kz*********:
9:25 this symbol looks like a Arabic word ( للقله لا ) and the drawing next to it is hands holding 9 fingers up. btw ( للقله لا ) means (not for a few) or (for a few no).

ro******:

The carved figures at 4:52 look recent. The lines haven't had time to age to a green patina like the rest of the rock.


an************:

8:26....I know what is means - The person who draw that circles bought Audi


48****:

8:32 hotdogging


Bi*********:

7:45 agricultural plots, fields, or pastures


Ge*******:

7:41 Map of Kermario dolmen? Kerleskan? It's pretty similar.


Su******************:
10:00
(a) Bird
(b) Bird doing ballet
(c) Bird on LSD

 

 

Top Comments : [TED] Why are these 32 symbols found in caves all over Europe | Genevieve von Petzinger

Ra**********:
Earliest human trolling. "Spray paint your butt on Grog's wall."

Archeologist: "These are complex thinkers, evolving highly developed communication skills to stay alive..."

Mi***:

It’s up to Weyland-Yutani to fund an expedition to find out what the engravings mean.


lc****:

There has been great evolution in the written language. From 32 symbols written on cave walls in Spain 5000 years ago to the modern era, when man can post stupid comments to videos on YouTube. 5000 years from now, some archeologist will unearth an I phone. But he will not be able to see the stupid comment because the battery will be dead.


Se************:

Before we could learn to talk, we had to learn to draw.


La********:

10,000 yrs from now
When trains and subways
are discovered
crushed and buried
By plate tectonic
Some archeologists
will be making same
speech about graffiti.


Wo******:
When I'm in a cave I often find myself wondering wtf am I doing in a cave?

mi********:

When I'm in a cave, I often find myself wondering: "Why am I in a cave? This is 2015"


es************:

Maybe those caves weren't filled with sand when the images were created. Maybe there were high walls back then.


Jo*********:

You call them cave men, I call them survivors of a cataclysmic event :)


An****:

What a fascinating job.

A lovely presented speech


LO*****:

Yoooooo cavemen was using Hashtags 30,000 years ago! That’s lit.

Caveman 1: #circle

Caveman 2: * bird

caveman 3: People are dying who have never died before.


Ja******:
Maybe they did not crawl. Look at the soil on the ground.

ke*******:

Looks like the collective unconscious too me. Hence all the similarities. Great work miss , like a modern day Sherlock Holmes only focusing on a past endeavours.


Ra**********:

I tried my hand at drawing on the walls & ceiling as a young'un and got my butt spanked for my artwork. LMAO


Ti***********:

All I could think about when I watched this video was "hobo" signs. Perhaps signs telling others of what benefits or dangers lurked in the surroundings, like a treasure map for a transient population. It certainly points to a certain level of awareness that separate "others" might benefit from this knowledge. I am a not at all familiar with this area of study though, so I could just be restating the obvious.


Ko*********:

The invention of lowbrow humor:
"Grog, put your hand on that wall and pull my finger."


ID**:

If I wanted my "art" to survive, I would keep it from vandals and the elements. So putting it deep in a cave would be an ideal choice. Maybe they were the scholars of their day.


Ar*******:

10:45 bell shaped signs? You mean deer hides?


VB*:

I showed the image of “the inscription” to a thai friend without any explanation that its an ancient cave in Spain she told me that says “thank you” ขอบคุณ


Pe*********:
The comment section - while funny to read- is telling us: we’re not that far away from the cavemen...

Ri*****:

This was covered in the film Prometheus or something.


De*******:
This actually reminds me of the hobo signs that are left everywhere. A few symbols seen everywhere and they have meaning to travelers. Maybe these was the nomads signs for diff things

Jo******:
The 32 symbols were standard on early keyboards.

Pr**********:
"Why always in cave?"

Simple answer: The others outside where washed away by rain!

Br***********:
Thank you for taking the time to explore and document these early artworks. I'd also like to thank you for doing the presentation. Great information and very interesting...

ba****:

Be hilarious while going deeper into caves looking for drawings they find etched on the walls equations in advanced calculus or string theory.


Ab*******:

This is interesting, but I have those same pictographs all down my hall from my Troglodyte sons and now grandkids.


Ni***********:
She has a therapeutic voice, I can listen to her podcast every night before going to sleep.

Al*********:

The question in the title was not addressed during the lecture.


Pe*******:
Just occurred to me while watching (for the second time, as I saw it few years back already): first, as little as I know, if people were equipped with only the torch (with some pitch), there would be lot of soot on the roof of the ceiling. I believe this wasn't always the case, so I'm rather thinking they used to bring the material for making the fire and lit a fire that lasted several hours. A follow-up thought is, what in the world these people do in such remote parts of caves for so long? My memore suggested a solution: for example, the American Indians had a ritual, that young men on the brink of adulthood went to a remote place to keep vigil and dream and follow their dreams. When they kept vigil for several days and nights (plus ate who knows what mushrooms or herbs which could have brought the visions even more reliably and sooner), they got dreams/visions and they remembered them. Then they went back to their tribe and let their shaman know and he would help them interpret the dreams. On the basis of this, they got their warrior name, and searched for some essence of that dream and when found, prepared it and made their own "medicine" that they wore in a pouch hanging around their neck.
So, what if these places were likewise the places of their young men's vigil? What if the pictures on the wall were the expression of their dreams and visions?

 


 

[TED] We gathered comments about popular videos and looked at them in summary, including play time, and order of popularity.

It's a good video or channel, but if you're sad because it's too long, please leave a YouTube channel or video link and I'll post it on this blog.

 

 

[TED] Channel Posting

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[TED] My stroke of insight | Jill Bolte Taylor

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[TED] The future we're building -- and boring | Elon Musk

[TED] The power of vulnerability | Brené Brown

[TED] The puzzle of motivation | Dan Pink

[TED] The transformative power of classical music | Benjamin Zander

[TED] What really matters at the end of life | BJ Miller

[TED] Who are you, really? The puzzle of personality | Brian Little

[TED] Why does the universe exist? | Jim Holt

[TED] Your body language may shape who you are | Amy Cuddy

[TED] Your brain on video games | Daphne Bavelier

 


 

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