In the mid-1960s, a small, plastic pocket watch-like device went on sale in Japan. Called the “manpokei”, it was the world’s first commercial pedometer. Roughly translated, manpo-kei means “10,000 steps meter”.
Why 10,000? “It likely originated as a marketing tool,” says I-Min Lee, an epidemiologist at Harvard University. Not only is 10,000 an easy number to remember, the character for 10,000 in Kanji, a script used in Japanese, looks a little like a person walking.
This health target, then, didn’t originate with science. Can we scrap it and have a nice sit down? As we’ve already seen, one way to investigate such questions is to look to our past way of life. Studying the Hadza, hunter-gatherers in Tanzania, as a window into how humans lived thousands of years ago, and…
