Stephen
đ€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
when you're playing against Celtic you will be in a game so that's my I'll be interested in obviously Lewis up against Callum because I'd like to see the two of them in the Scotland squad but
Yep, yep.
Again, my wee grandson, AJ, has got to the game tonight, so I'm looking at it.
I think, obviously, I think Rangers will win about 2-0, 3-1.
I think they're playing really, really well now.
So there, let me know.
Danny Rose got them playing with a lot of confidence, with a lot of determination.
And the way after the ball, when I talked to my wee son-in-law and my wee grandson and that, he went, they just don't stop.
As soon as they lost the ball, they're back fighting to try and get it back.
Whereas before, they would just sit back and go, right, are we going to defend this?
Are we going to get away with this?
They seem to have a different attitude, Paul.
And again, let me know.
Dan, last time we talked about, you know, in the 1970s there being this very popular conception of native people as being inherently environmentalist. And I think in a lot of ways, we've sort of moved past that. And I think from a historical perspective, we recognize that not all human actions on the landscape prior to European contact were environmentally sustainable.
Dan, last time we talked about, you know, in the 1970s there being this very popular conception of native people as being inherently environmentalist. And I think in a lot of ways, we've sort of moved past that. And I think from a historical perspective, we recognize that not all human actions on the landscape prior to European contact were environmentally sustainable.
Dan, last time we talked about, you know, in the 1970s there being this very popular conception of native people as being inherently environmentalist. And I think in a lot of ways, we've sort of moved past that. And I think from a historical perspective, we recognize that not all human actions on the landscape prior to European contact were environmentally sustainable.
But then in this lecture, you describe a long swath of time that does appear to be relatively stable or sustainable. And I wonder, not necessarily asking if it was sustainable, but more sort of how you begin to untangle the contradictions there.
But then in this lecture, you describe a long swath of time that does appear to be relatively stable or sustainable. And I wonder, not necessarily asking if it was sustainable, but more sort of how you begin to untangle the contradictions there.
But then in this lecture, you describe a long swath of time that does appear to be relatively stable or sustainable. And I wonder, not necessarily asking if it was sustainable, but more sort of how you begin to untangle the contradictions there.
I think when I was looking at this episode, it's an episode about a long period of time from the Pleistocene extinctions up until first contact, essentially. And it treats it almost as a whole. And I think that has a lot of explanatory power. But also there's moments in it where you can drill down and say, like, Cahokia.