preview

The Other One-Third Of The Globe Analysis

Decent Essays
Open Document

The article, “The Other One-Third of The Globe” written by Ben Finney, brings up many interesting points that relate to the world today. Throughout the article, numerous ideas, relatable to present day, are discussed including ideas involving technology, skill, and Eurocentrism. It is not just these thoughts alone that is so interesting, but their absence and presence in the twenty-first century, as ideas grow and skills are lost.
According to the article, “the ocean-going canoe was the vehicle that Austronesian speakers employed to expand across the South Pacific” (p. 278). Thousands of miles were traveled in these canoes, boats that lacked an auxiliary motor and navigational equipment. Voyagers had to rely solely on natural forces to propel …show more content…

280). “The oceanic lands and their offshore waters… furnished little in the way of wild vegetable foods to sustain large settled populations,” (p. 280) meaning that a multitude of skills had to be possessed by the pioneers to enable them to survive. They had to improve technology, and increase their knowledge to create working farms as “fisherman and food gatherers alone could not have flourished in any great numbers in remote Oceania” (p. 280). As years have passed since then, globalization has allowed for more specialization in regions, meaning that most people nowadays have skills specific to their region, such as fishing, farming, engineering, or gathering, in contrast to the settlers who had to possess all four and more. Because of increased technology and communication, people can survive almost anywhere without a broad understanding of farming, gathering, fishing, engineering, e.t.c.. Over the centuries, survival has evolved, and by working together, humans have been able to minimize the amount of knowledge necessary to survive, but maximize the amount of interaction and communication necessary for

Get Access