Zhnyaka
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 839
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
- Dislikes
- Homophobia, racism, sexism
Over all these millions of years, we have evolved from those early homo species and we have developed a range of civilizations and learned not to behave in the ways that our distant ancestors did. Fear may well be inherent but is not reasonable, for the most part (any more than is my fear of spiders). We have to be people of reason these days, even if we are still suspicious and ready to expect the unexpected. Humanity has grown up, society has grown up and it is about time we started behaving like grown ups. There are things that it is reasonable to be wary of, but those things are not other humans, just because they have red hair, dark skin, or wear tartan, or green, nor if they have a different culture or faith.
I would really like us to grow up, but looking at the world, I sometimes think that we are not far from the Neanderthals.
In general, it's amazing how much evolution has caused in us: your and my fear of spiders (in general, almost all children are afraid of spiders, so we can say that it's evolutionary; there is a version about ancient giant spiders, but I don't like to think about it), fear of snakes, dreams where we fall (because that monkeys have a chance to fall by jumping from branch to branch, but there is no danger of drowning, for example, so even if we have never fallen, we sometimes have nightmares about falling, but we do not dream that we are drowning if we haven't had a similar experience), love for cats (people, who liked watching predators, could better to escape from them), the houses that we build in childhood (because our ancestors were safer in caves), constant anxiety (in order to escape from a predator in time), etc. In fact, if our evolutionary fears and our modern understanding collide, the latter will not always win, as, for example, when encountering spiders. It takes a lot of effort for me to tell myself that the spider has a lot more reason to be afraid of me, and that I shouldn't offend it.
But fortunately, love and altruism are also an evolutionary advantage. I like the idea that the beginning of civilization is evidenced not by the first tools of labor, but by a skeleton with a fused tibia. This means that someone took care of this person until he couldn't get his own food and run away from predators .
I really wish more people thought like you.
Still, happy to realise that you, I, and @Zhnyaka are family, even if it's only through a shared ancestor of fytoplankton!
LUCA is also a common ancestor for you and spider