- Energy
Energy as the Foundation of Human Survival
From the very beginning, human survival has depended on energy.
Not energy in the modern sense of electricity or fuel, but the physical energy of the individual — the ability to act, move, and endure.
Energy of the individual was required to:
Collect water, often travelling long distances.
Gather or hunt food for themselves and their family.
Build shelter from the elements.
Fight off predators and other threats.
Protect children and ensure the continuation of the family line.
Every step in early human life was an investment of personal energy to secure the basic requirements:
Water
Food
Shelter
Safety
Reproduction
As human groups grew larger — families → clans → tribes — energy demand shifted:
Shared hunting increased efficiency.
Divided roles allowed some to conserve energy while others expanded output.
Cooperation multiplied the total energy available to the group.
Over time, the collective energy of communities became the driving force behind:
Agriculture
Settlements
Societies
States
Civilizations
In every stage of human development, survival has always been tied to how much energy the individual and the group could produce, store, and use effectively.