The Human Journey
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The Human Journey

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Taught by award-winning science writer Gaia Vince, this course covers a 300,000-year history of humans as a migrating species. While our ape cousins have stayed in the environments where they evolved, we have been on the move-eventually populating the globe. How and why? This course also takes you into the future, when millions of people will be migrating to escape the effects of climate change.
20261 season
TV-PG
12 (na) mga episode
  • 1. The Migrating Ape

    1. The Migrating Ape

    Humans are not a stay-at-home species. While our ape cousins remain confined to the tropical forests they have inhabited for millions of years, we have spread across the globe. What makes us such successful migrants? Begin your exploration of the key factors that let us adapt to diverse landscapes, climates, food sources, and other challenges-allowing us to outcompete all rivals.
    Humans are not a stay-at-home species. While our ape cousins remain confined to the tropical forests they have inhabited for millions of years, we have spread across the globe. What makes us such successful migrants? Begin your exploration of the key factors that let us adapt to diverse landscapes, climates, food sources, and other challenges-allowing us to outcompete all rivals.
    TV-PG
    25min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • 2. Why Cooperation Is the Key to Our Success

    2. Why Cooperation Is the Key to Our Success

    As resourceful as humans are, we can't survive alone. Cooperation is the key to success under new conditions. Consider the cautionary tale of the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition, which set out to explore interior Australia in the mid-1800s. Despite being exceptionally well-equipped, the mission ended in disaster-largely because its leaders ignored Aboriginal knowledge of the environment.
    As resourceful as humans are, we can't survive alone. Cooperation is the key to success under new conditions. Consider the cautionary tale of the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition, which set out to explore interior Australia in the mid-1800s. Despite being exceptionally well-equipped, the mission ended in disaster-largely because its leaders ignored Aboriginal knowledge of the environment.
    TV-PG
    29min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • 3. Moving Ourselves and Our Tools

    3. Moving Ourselves and Our Tools

    Explore two innovations that fundamentally shaped our species. Fire-and its use for cooking-provided access to calorie-rich, easily digestible food, dramatically reducing the time needed for foraging. Carrying technology, from bags and baskets to water skins, allowed us to transport tools and essentials-an ability unique among animals. Both fueled a hunting lifestyle that drove human expansion.
    Explore two innovations that fundamentally shaped our species. Fire-and its use for cooking-provided access to calorie-rich, easily digestible food, dramatically reducing the time needed for foraging. Carrying technology, from bags and baskets to water skins, allowed us to transport tools and essentials-an ability unique among animals. Both fueled a hunting lifestyle that drove human expansion.
    TV-PG
    28min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • 4. How We Invented Valuables to Exchange

    4. How We Invented Valuables to Exchange

    Discover how trade supercharged human migration and laid the groundwork for complex societies. Early groups exchanged surplus goods with their neighbors in mutually beneficial swaps. Before long, highly valued personal adornments-like beads and jewels-entered the mix, giving rise to a market for inessential but beautiful objects that functioned as an early form of money.
    Discover how trade supercharged human migration and laid the groundwork for complex societies. Early groups exchanged surplus goods with their neighbors in mutually beneficial swaps. Before long, highly valued personal adornments-like beads and jewels-entered the mix, giving rise to a market for inessential but beautiful objects that functioned as an early form of money.
    TV-PG
    34min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • 5. Moving Out of Africa and across the Globe

    5. Moving Out of Africa and across the Globe

    Trace the great migration of our ancestors across the globe, starting with Homo erectus, who ventured out of Africa some 1.9 million years ago. Homo sapiens followed about 80,000 years ago, mixing with other hominin populations, notably Neanderthals and Denisovans. Around 20,000 years ago, humans crossed into the Americas, populating the continents in several waves during the last glacial period.
    Trace the great migration of our ancestors across the globe, starting with Homo erectus, who ventured out of Africa some 1.9 million years ago. Homo sapiens followed about 80,000 years ago, mixing with other hominin populations, notably Neanderthals and Denisovans. Around 20,000 years ago, humans crossed into the Americas, populating the continents in several waves during the last glacial period.
    TV-PG
    32min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • 6. From Hunting and Gathering to Growing Food

    6. From Hunting and Gathering to Growing Food

    If humans are born to migrate, what compelled our ancestors to settle down roughly 12,000 years ago? Investigate the origins of agriculture and why this comparatively unhealthy, labor-intensive practice took off. Was farming such a good idea that it persuaded mobile foragers to change their ways, or did early farmers themselves push outward, claiming new land and transforming the world?
    If humans are born to migrate, what compelled our ancestors to settle down roughly 12,000 years ago? Investigate the origins of agriculture and why this comparatively unhealthy, labor-intensive practice took off. Was farming such a good idea that it persuaded mobile foragers to change their ways, or did early farmers themselves push outward, claiming new land and transforming the world?
    TV-PG
    34min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • 7. How Migration Changed Our Genes and Cultures

    7. How Migration Changed Our Genes and Cultures

    Modern Europeans descend from three genetically distinct ancient populations: pre-Ice Age hunter-gatherers, early farmers from the Middle East, and a later-arriving group of steppe herders from Eurasia known as the Yamnaya, who contributed the largest genetic share. Who were these mysterious nomadic pastoralists, and how did they shape the ancestry and languages of much of the world?
    Modern Europeans descend from three genetically distinct ancient populations: pre-Ice Age hunter-gatherers, early farmers from the Middle East, and a later-arriving group of steppe herders from Eurasia known as the Yamnaya, who contributed the largest genetic share. Who were these mysterious nomadic pastoralists, and how did they shape the ancestry and languages of much of the world?
    TV-PG
    33min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • 8. How We Invented Civilization

    8. How We Invented Civilization

    As the human population grew, a new kind of settlement emerged: the city. Explore the dynamics of these artificial entities, which became centers of trade, governance, and culture-and of disease. Drawing people from near and far, cities fostered unprecedented genetic exchange. Discover how rapidly they form in the modern world, where more than half of humanity now lives in urban communities.
    As the human population grew, a new kind of settlement emerged: the city. Explore the dynamics of these artificial entities, which became centers of trade, governance, and culture-and of disease. Drawing people from near and far, cities fostered unprecedented genetic exchange. Discover how rapidly they form in the modern world, where more than half of humanity now lives in urban communities.
    TV-PG
    31min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • 9. Migration in the 21st Century

    9. Migration in the 21st Century

    Migration is humanity's oldest survival strategy-and one we'll need more than ever, as hotter temperatures and sea-level rise render parts of the planet uninhabitable. With the global human population now exceeding 8 billion, this relocation will be on a scale far exceeding that out of Africa, or the expansion into formerly frozen lands, or any of the other great migrations by our ancestors.
    Migration is humanity's oldest survival strategy-and one we'll need more than ever, as hotter temperatures and sea-level rise render parts of the planet uninhabitable. With the global human population now exceeding 8 billion, this relocation will be on a scale far exceeding that out of Africa, or the expansion into formerly frozen lands, or any of the other great migrations by our ancestors.
    TV-PG
    30min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • 10. How We Made Migration Hard

    10. How We Made Migration Hard

    Consider the hurdles faced by people fleeing war, drought, tyranny, or other perils in search of a better life. Today, national borders are their biggest obstacle-yet historically, these boundaries are a very recent invention. How did they arise, and how did the concept of national identity take hold in a species that evolved to manage social life in groups of no more than about 150 individuals?
    Consider the hurdles faced by people fleeing war, drought, tyranny, or other perils in search of a better life. Today, national borders are their biggest obstacle-yet historically, these boundaries are a very recent invention. How did they arise, and how did the concept of national identity take hold in a species that evolved to manage social life in groups of no more than about 150 individuals?
    TV-PG
    32min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • 11. The Economics of Migration

    11. The Economics of Migration

    What are the economic stakes on both sides of migration-what do migrants stand to gain or lose, and how are receiving communities affected in turn? Learn that under most circumstances, migration can be a win/win proposition for all parties. Migrants often seek higher wages and opportunity; host regions gain needed labor, increased economic activity, and younger workers to help support retirees.
    What are the economic stakes on both sides of migration-what do migrants stand to gain or lose, and how are receiving communities affected in turn? Learn that under most circumstances, migration can be a win/win proposition for all parties. Migrants often seek higher wages and opportunity; host regions gain needed labor, increased economic activity, and younger workers to help support retirees.
    TV-PG
    31min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • 12. The Next Phase of Our Human Journey

    12. The Next Phase of Our Human Journey

    As we enter a century of unprecedented global human movement, how can we respond wisely? This final lecture explores the case for managing migration-not merely controlling it. With careful planning, we can build entirely new cities and foster sustainable, well-functioning communities-even as some regions are abandoned and others adapted to meet the realities of a changing climate.
    As we enter a century of unprecedented global human movement, how can we respond wisely? This final lecture explores the case for managing migration-not merely controlling it. With careful planning, we can build entirely new cities and foster sustainable, well-functioning communities-even as some regions are abandoned and others adapted to meet the realities of a changing climate.
    TV-PG
    31min
    Mar 18, 2026
  • The Human Journey
    20261 season
    Taught by award-winning science writer Gaia Vince, this course covers a 300,000-year history of humans as a migrating species. While our ape cousins have stayed in the environments where they evolved, we have been on the move-eventually populating the globe. How and why? This course also takes you into the future, when millions of people will be migrating to escape the effects of climate change.
    Mga Creator at Cast
    Mga Producer
    The Great Courses
    Cast
    Gaia Vince
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    The Great Courses
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