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00:13:13
00:15:18
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Transcription: [00:13:13]
{SPEAKER name="Gordon Ekholm"}
peoples to ideas coming across.
[00:13:16]

{SPEAKER name="Shirley Gorenstein"}
But I think also-- I think-- I don't know-- Well I I-- I think that when you find contact between very different cultures then-- which is what I was saying before--

[00:13:33]
{SPEAKER name="Shirley Gorenstein"}
I think then you might see an acceleration of change so that even though the same process may be operating within the Southwest or between Meso-America and the Southwest as may be

[00:13:42]
{SPEAKER name="Shirley Gorenstein"}
operating in Asia across the Pacific into Meso-America. I think that the kinds of changes
that occur within the Southwest may not be as great as between very different cultures as I think

[00:14:00]
{SPEAKER name="Shirley Gorenstein"}
the differences can sometimes produce a change. That's one culture in contact with a very different one
can sometimes be catapulted into onto a new level of--

[00:14:13]
{SPEAKER name="Gordon Ekholm"}
Well, I think-- I think that occurs-- Sometimes, sometimes it occurs and sometimes doesn't. Some of the-- difficulty-- or some of the factors involved-- I think are seen in the history of the old world.

[00:14:39]
{SPEAKER name="Gordon Ekholm"}
Now why meso-- Mediterranean culture and Middle Easter Culture didn't diffuse into the into Africa I think is a sort of a very interesting case of how in one direction a a diffusion will take place and not in another.

[00:15:06]
{SPEAKER name="Gordon Ekholm"}
The same kinds of problems we've been talking about for the new world, of course, occurred throughout the old world. In the old world there's been a-- for a long time-- a belief


Transcription Notes:
Last quote should read "the same kind of problems we've been talking about for the new world,"