Micheal, > This event [increased leisure time] has happened in the past few > hundred years, at most, and only with the privileged. On what basis do you claim it has happened only in the past few hundred years? Looks to me like leisure time for the average person has been increasing steadily for many thousands years, starting from the invention of the wheel or thereabouts. > Most people in the world > still have to work their tails off(no pun intended) even today. Exactly. And you are trying to say that with all our intelligence and progress we have managed only to create a situation much worse than that of our paleo ancestors. If what you are saying is true then we have not evolved. We have DEvolved. >> Did we spend a million years or more just >> contemplating our navels? I doubt it. > Singing and dancing sound fun to me, perhaps a drum circle. > Can't wait for that gathering, just think, single paleo woman! I think you have a naive and overly romanticized view of paleolithic life. I think our paleo ancestors worked their tails off from dawn to dusk to hunt and gather enough food to feed themselves and their families. It was for this reason that they had no time to invent written language or to build spaceships to the moon. They were too busy trying to scrounge a living. Intellectual endeavours could not be pursued until our basic needs for food and shelter were met and handled efficiently. This happened in the neolithic, when we learned how to save ourselves *enormous* amounts of time by growing our own food. Organic depression has probably always been with us but I suspect the modern concept of situational depression became common only at the neolithic, as the human mind had trouble adapting to its new role as something other than a simple hunting and food gathering and mate finding tool. With the new free leisure time of the neolithic period, the human mind became burdened with abstract social problems and with considerations of ego and with obsessions about sexual relations and "personality" and "demeanor" and "popularity" and "conformity" and with all the rest of that dreg from the modern human social drama that most of us probably despise. Depression would have been a natural response. In these terms depression is probably just another modern "disease of civilization", like diabetes. -gts