Ishtar wrote:I'll give you an argument against, John. It's called 'forest television'.
But even apart from that, why do we assume that these people are at ground zero in terms of intelligence and nous when they survived and flourished in conditions in which none of us could today?
Do we think that ancient man was stupid because he didn't know how to build cities and industries that pollute the airs and seas, and hadn't invented fishing nets so effective that they deplete the seas of fish?
Just because they wouldn't have known how to populate and make calculations on an Excel spreadsheet that to function requires one of the filthiest processes on this planet (i.e. copper smelting) doesn't mean that they wouldn't have known the best way to optimise their own living conditions.
John, imagine this scenario. You and I crash land our plane on a river bank right in the middle of one of the remotest parts of the Amazonian rainforest and the bump on our heads gives us amnesia, so we can't remember much about who we are and how to do stuff. After a day or so, we are very hungry and on the other side of the river, about a 50 metres away, we can see a banana tree with bunches of bananas fully ripened in the sun..
How long do you think it would take us to think up and build a dug-out canoe with the stones and whatever else was lying around. I'd say about half a day tops!
Ishtar -
Let us go back in time a considerable distance. After all, I grew up with the paleontological,
Rather than the archaeological.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26094165/
So, approximateley 50 million years ago
We were tiny tree-dwelling insectivores.
With the interesting characteristics of binocular vision
And some kind of hands.
Fifty million years of history............
Not to mention early primate communication
Leads me to think that we are somewhat hardwired
Neurologically.
Which is to say that species-specific communication and
Optimal survival patterns
Led us to what we now call civilization
Which, for various reasons, is on a route of retrogression
Which will likely eliminate the species,
And possibly the Earth along with it.
Contrary to TS Eliot's statement that
We are likely to go out with a whimper rather than a bang.
My point to your point is
That we all have a "species memory"
- I won't use the word racial -
Of boats, and a bunch of other stuff.
So, despite plane crash and disorientation,
The neurological map kicks in,
Right back to 50m years ago.
Which - fast forward to the present -
Is "Forest Television",
Binocular eyes and hands and all.
The only missing element
Is self-awareness.
And that, my dear,
Is an entirely different argument.
hoka hey
john
"Man is a marvellous curiosity. When he is at his very, very best he is sort of a low-grade nickel-plated angel; at his worst he is unspeakable, unimaginable; and first and last and all the time he is a sarcasm."
Mark Twain