Good questions... carefully targeted.freediver wrote:So what possessions did they have?
It appear that did not have material possessions as we consider them however they must have had personal items like knives, clothes, stone tools, weapons ...etc. However, who knows.This demonstrates that hunter-gatherers do not exist on a mere subsistence economy but rather live among plenty. Through knowledge of their environment hunter-gatherers are able to change what foreigners may deem as meager and unreliable natural resources into rich subsistence resources. Through this they are able to effectively and efficiently provide for themselves and minimize the amount of time spent procuring food. "[T]he food quest is so successful that half the time the people do not know what to do with themselves".[3] Hunter-gatherers also experience "affluence without abundance"[3] as they simply meet their required ends and do not require surplus nor material possessions (as these would be a hindrance to their nomadic lifestyle).
If all things were owned by the tribe and not the individual then I guess stealing could not happen.
However I find it hard to believe that people did not own things even if they are hunter gatherers. jewelry maybe.
So I guess stealing only became a real concept during the Neolithic period when we started to farm.
This is the same place/region the 3 modern religion were born that had morals at the core.The beginning of the Neolithic culture is considered to be in the Levant (Jericho, modern-day West Bank) about 10,200–8,800 BC.