Ancient hunter/gatherers were "vegan"

Graeme M

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I've seen quite a few articles in recent years casting the diets of ancient hunter/gatherer populations as anything from vegan to vegetarian to omnivore to hyper-carnivore. Of course, this simply reflects that different groups ate differing diets depending on where they lived. Here in Australia, indigenous peoples in the past ate diets that varied from coast to inland deserts, with some being almost 80% vegetarian and others more like 60-70% animal eaters.

But it seems to me these arguments and claims etc miss the point. Vegans wanting to show that ancients ate mostly plants are up against it because people have always eaten animals to some extent or another. What if we think about it a different way?

The aim of veganism is fairness - that we should be fair to other animals when we can do that. The goals are really just two: for all animals to be free, and for us not to be cruel to them whenever we can do that.

Sooo... the ancients lived before agriculture and domesticated animals even existed. Thus, all animals were free. The animals they hunted and ate, were free. The main goal of veganism was realised. Of course, the ancients were likely cruel to the animals. Spearing them, trapping them, driving them over cliffs is essentially cruel in effect. But, let's be honest, they had few alternatives, likely sought to despatch animal prey as quickly as possible in the circumstances, and likely tended not to simply kill as many animals as they could at any given time. Their cruelty hardly exceeded that of other predators and likely was rather less so.

It seems to me that all our ancient hunter/gather ancestors lived lives that were - in practice - consistent with the goals of veganism. And at the least, much more so than modern folk. We don't have to prove what they did or did not eat.
 
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I too, find this an interesting topic of discussion. And I also agree that most of the discussions misses the point but maybe for a different reason that you do.

For me veganism is an intention. and the intention has to do with compassion - compassion for animals.

I also think that there is a difference between a plant based diet and the vegan lifestyle. It might be just in the details but again I feel it mostly has to do with intention.

Several early societies did not eat meat. And although I'm sure that they felt compassion for animals that was not their stated primary reason. Many of these cultures believed in reincarnation. You didn't eat kill animals (or even bugs) because that animal may have been your uncle Eddie. or you might come back as a lamb.
 
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For me veganism is an intention. and the intention has to do with compassion - compassion for animals.
Yes, that's true. That's why I didn't say ancient peoples actually were vegan. My point is that their lifestyles was actually consistent with veganism, far more so than most modern people's lifestyle. Veganism wants animals to be free and us not to be cruel, whenever that's possible. That's exactly how things were to the extent it was possible for the people who lived then. Of course they didn't specifically intend to be vegan, but I think they did intend to have perhaps a fairer regard for the other animals we often don't have now. I think that in many cases, other animals ("nature") was woven into their mythologies and cultural beliefs, in such a way that they had a deeper respect for the lives of other animals than we seem to encourage.

In this article about the Plains Indians of North America, the author highlights how the buffalo was an intrinsic part of both diet and culture with the people revering the animal as a gift from the Creator.

While the diet of these people was high in animal content derived from bison, deer, elk, antelope and others, they also ate what plant foods were available such as hazel nuts, wild plums, prickly pear, wild onion etc. They ate judiciously from their surrounds, used all of the animals they killed for food and other resources and treated both the animals and the environment as vitally important and inherent to their spiritual outlook.

We could say that in this way, the Plains Indians - and many other ancient hunter/gatherer societies - were fundamentally fair in their relationship with other species. And it's fairness that we are aiming for with veganism. Compassion might be the driver, however it's not mere kindness we are wanting but an actual state - that of fairness and justice for other species. So I'd argue - with good reason, I hope - that ancient hunter/gatherers lived far more consistently with the aims of veganism than we do today. That's why there is no reason to spend any time whatsoever trying to prove what diet ancient people ate (because they never ate just plants).

 
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It's all about the options you have and the choices you make. If you have the option of buying plant based food in your supermarket but instead buy flesh or go out and hunt animals for food, you are not a vegan. If you had plenty of hazel nuts, wild plums, prickly pear, wild onion etc, in the wild but still chose to hunt animals for their flesh then you are not a vegan. If the above wild plant based foods were less in quantity then you have no option than to hunt for animals, which would be ethically vegan. It's all about the options you have and the choices you make. I bet that these hunter folks wouldn't have give up their animal hunting even if there was plenty of wild plant based food available, so I would not consider them vegan.

A best candidate for historical vegans would be jains. Back in the day, in BCE, jains were vegan. Of course they drank milk, but the cows were treated extremely well to the point of worship(compared to the factory farming cows of today whose milk these current day non-vegan jains drink). They didn't kill the male calves but used them(after they grew up) as transport and for tilling the soil . Of course they had no option, but to have milk because there was no B12 supplements back then, or cars and tractors. So you could say there were vegans way way back. But they were not primitive hunter gatherer folks but from advanced agricultural civilizations. Ofcourse their intent might be different, as it's less to do with empathy and more to do with reincarnation, but the historical jains would still be considered vegan, as some vegans of today are still by definition vegans not because of empathy for animals but because of health and other selfish reasons.
 
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I bet that these hunter folks wouldn't have give up their animal hunting even if there was plenty of wild plant based food available, so I would not consider them vegan
OK, but I didn't say that ancient hunter/gatherers were vegan. I said that in their lifestyles - what they actually did - they were far more consistent with the goals of veganism than most folk today. We don't need to prove what they ate - that's irrelevant to what we do today. But we can point out the fact they were more like vegans than most moderns.

I believe there are just two goals of veganism - for animals to be free to live their own lives and for us not to be cruel to them, whenever we can do that. So, to what extent were those goals achieved 20,000 years ago, compared to today? Just to be clear, I'm not saying that hunter/gatherers were all making fair and kind choices, not by any stretch of the imagination. They just lived their lives. But the end result was much more like what veganism is about than how most of us are living today, when we look at things from the point of view of other animals.
 
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OK, but I didn't say that ancient hunter/gatherers were vegan. I said that in their lifestyles - what they actually did - they were far more consistent with the goals of veganism than most folk today. We don't need to prove what they ate - that's irrelevant to what we do today. But we can point out the fact they were more like vegans than most moderns.

I believe there are just two goals of veganism - for animals to be free to live their own lives and for us not to be cruel to them, whenever we can do that. So, to what extent were those goals achieved 20,000 years ago, compared to today? Just to be clear, I'm not saying that hunter/gatherers were all making fair and kind choices, not by any stretch of the imagination. They just lived their lives. But the end result was much more like what veganism is about than how most of us are living today, when we look at things from the point of view of other animals.
Is their hunting lifestyle more ethical than the lifestyle of current day hunters, other omnivores and vegetarians? Yes, they killed the animals, but didn't torture them in factory farms atleast. They disrupted the ecosystem yes, but they didn't have the choice/learn about agriculture.

Is their hunting lifestyle more ethical than the lifestyle of vegans of today? I'd say no because these hunters would have still intentionally killed animals when plant based options could have been available. Current day vegans make the choice of leaving out animal products when plant based options are available. So current day vegans are morally superior to those old age hunter gatherers.

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Imagine if the entire world became vegan, we could return back atleast 30 million sq km back to forests. That's a 75% increase of forest area. And if we leave this increased forest area alone(don't hunt) we could finally stop the holocene mass extinction.

Now imagine if the entire world population of 7.5 billion(leaving out 0.5 billion due to vegetarians/vegans) embraced the hunter gatherers lifestyle of hunting in the forests, imagine what would happen. This is the current animal stock situation in the world as of now.


Cattle 416 Million Tonnes
Buffalo 68 Mt
Sheep 39 Mt
Pigs 38 Mt
Goats 32 Mt
Chickens 73Mt (I calculated approximately)
Camels 9Mt
Didn't include turkeys and other birds.

total 684 million tonnes.




Wild land mammals - 24 Mt
Let's add another generous 70 Mt of wild reptiles and wild birds left in. the wild.

That's just 94 million of wild animal mass in total.

So these 7.5 billion people letting go of 684 million tonnes of grazing and factory farmed animals, and embracing a hunting lifestyle to just get 94 million tonnes of wild animals. How long do you think these poor wild animals would last? They would completely empty the forests of wild animals max within 3 years of hunting.
 
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So these 7.5 billion people letting go of 684 million tonnes of grazing and factory farmed animals, and embracing a hunting lifestyle to just get 94 million tonnes of wild animals. How long do you think these poor wild animals would last? They would completely empty the forests of wild animals max within 3 years of hunting.
Well, yes that's true. I don't think that I suggested we should all go back to being hunter/gatherers, though. I'm just pointing out an interesting fact about veganism - that in practice, ancient folk were living pretty much according to the ethics. Of course, they neither knew about that nor would they have cared and it's irrelevant to what we do now. BUT, the point is there's no need to worry about what they ate. Veganism isn't a diet, it's an ethics aimed at keeping animals free and not caused to unnecessarily suffer from our actions. I just think that's a more fruitful line of argument than trying to pretend people used be mainly eating plants.
 
It's all about the options you have and the choices you make. If you have the option of buying plant based food in your supermarket but instead buy flesh or go out and hunt animals for food, you are not a vegan. If you had plenty of hazel nuts, wild plums, prickly pear, wild onion etc, in the wild but still chose to hunt animals for their flesh then you are not a vegan. If the above wild plant based foods were less in quantity then you have no option than to hunt for animals, which would be ethically vegan. It's all about the options you have and the choices you make. I bet that these hunter folks wouldn't have give up their animal hunting even if there was plenty of wild plant based food available, so I would not consider them vegan.

A best candidate for historical vegans would be jains. Back in the day, in BCE, jains were vegan. Of course they drank milk, but the cows were treated extremely well to the point of worship(compared to the factory farming cows of today whose milk these current day non-vegan jains drink). They didn't kill the male calves but used them(after they grew up) as transport and for tilling the soil . Of course they had no option, but to have milk because there was no B12 supplements back then, or cars and tractors. So you could say there were vegans way way back. But they were not primitive hunter gatherer folks but from advanced agricultural civilizations. Ofcourse their intent might be different, as it's less to do with empathy and more to do with reincarnation, but the historical jains would still be considered vegan, as some vegans of today are still by definition vegans not because of empathy for animals but because of health and other selfish reasons.


I'd like to make a small correction. Cows do not synthesize B12. Modern cows receive B12 from injections.

Our ancestors got their B12 from the soil. They didn't have our overly hygienic method of eating. No peeling, no intense washing, and if a little bit of dirt got into the pot, it was OK. The B12 remained in the food FROM THE PLANTS.


The vitamin is synthesized by soil microbes that form symbiotic relationships with plant roots.
 
I'd like to make a small correction. Cows do not synthesize B12. Modern cows receive B12 from injections.
I'm not sure that's quite true. Cows DO produce B12 in their gut though technically it's their gut bacteria that do that. They need cobalt from their diet and then use rumen microbes to synthesise cobalamin. It's true that there are bacteria in soil that synthesise B12 but cows don't rely on those, they already have the bacteria in their guts. What they need is cobalt in their diet. They can still have B12 deficiency in certain conditions, so they need to be supplemented. I don't think that's a standard, whole of life thing though. I am pretty sure our ancestors primarily got their B12 from animal tissue. Other great apes get a lot from eating their own poop, because like us, their bacteria that synthesise cobalamin live too far down the digestive tract to produce absorbable B12.
 
I'm not sure that's quite true. Cows DO produce B12 in their gut though technically it's their gut bacteria that do that. They need cobalt from their diet and then use rumen microbes to synthesise cobalamin. It's true that there are bacteria in soil that synthesise B12 but cows don't rely on those, they already have the bacteria in their guts. What they need is cobalt in their diet. They can still have B12 deficiency in certain conditions, so they need to be supplemented. I don't think that's a standard, whole of life thing though. I am pretty sure our ancestors primarily got their B12 from animal tissue. Other great apes get a lot from eating their own poop, because like us, their bacteria that synthesise cobalamin live too far down the digestive tract to produce absorbable B12.
And vegetables would grow in soil naturally fertilized with poop. Water would contain B12 from the soil runoff.
 
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