I would wonder what would happen should the European powers had been delayed in the development by a few hundred years. Would the America's have developed a stronger culture, or would they remained in their tribal groups without unification in any real, tangible manner that lasted?
I figure that there's a decent chance of minor to major unification, but
probably no brotherhood from sea to shining sea. But...
Edoot: Arguably, the Aztecs were the most far along. But they also had latent internal issues that might have kept them from developing for a longer period of time.
Ah, there's my geographical something-centrism again. I assumed we were discussing the North American natives. Yeah... there were a few tribes down there that were
freaky bad (if the history is correct; "the savage brutes" might just have been a European myth. Or maybe not; "the wonderful noble savages" is probably incorrect too). (And of course it only seems freaky bad because it's so alien; an Aztec might say the same thing about today's society, based on something-or-other.)
Second doot: Arguably speaking further, the Native American population crashed hard as soon as European illnesses got thrown into the mix. Recovering from that, then attempting to form their own respective nations again would have been a monumental task.
...following from the first not-doot, yeah, I don't think the natives could have repelled the Europeans, no matter how unified they were. They could not have expected biological warfare. European colonists - the first American terrorists?
Also, there are good reasons that many animals aren't domesticated. You can't just take any animal and domesticate it. Only animals with certain mentalities and instincts will work.
You sure? I'm remembering these wild foxes that were domesticated in only a few generations, using only artificial selection.
If it was possible and useful, it was done already, excluding modern efforts aided by fancy new methods.
Not all animals have had the
privilege of existing near a newborn, innovating species. If I come across a Blurtschpouf, perhaps I will not domesticate it. Maybe I don't know how, because the innovation was lost. Maybe I simply won't, because I didn't put the right ideas together and think "hmm, these Blurtschpoufs could be useful for X!" Maybe I'm not allowed to, because the High Floofa has decreed that only pigs and elephants can be domesticated. Maybe I simply see no reason to, but if I
had, then the immunity my society
would have developed
would have protected it from the Invasion of the Land-Snatchers.
In a nutshell, human societies are not perfect optimizing machines, and some natural resources will go unused.
That’s what America is about, a land of dreams and opportunity,
That's what America is about, a land of awful working conditions and forced employment,