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In this passage, Harari is closing out his discussion on life for ancient human foragers between 70,000 and 12,000 years ago. So far, he’s argued that foragers enjoyed a better quality of life overall, because they worked less, did more interesting work, and ate better. Now, he adds one final argument to strengthen his claim that people in foraging societies were better off than the farmers and factory workers who lived in subsequent generations. He notes that foragers were far more nomadic: they lived in smaller, more spread out communities and roamed freely in the wild. Farmers, in contrast, have…