There are NOT 625 living ape species.
Humans ARE apes.
Carry on with this entertaining foolishness.
Emergence. Abiogenesis was an emergence. Fertilisation is an emergence. The ignition of stars is an emergence.
There are not 626 ape species. I believe there are seven, of which humans are one.
Would you trust a stranger of a trainer to control 2 adolescent chimps in a crowded, loud movie theater where your kids are sitting? Why risk it?davidm wrote: ↑Tue Sep 12, 2017 4:13 am Our beautiful, evolutionarily closest relatives attend the movies.![]()
It doesn't take 9 months to conceive a human, it only takes a very short time, it takes 9 months of gestation from conception to birth.
Your full style is all present here: clarity, balance, and transparency, but simplistic notions of your delicacy mask exceptional power of your finest masterpiece, exploiting chromatic suspensions.Greta wrote: ↑Mon Sep 11, 2017 11:51 pm Emergence. Abiogenesis was an emergence. Fertilisation is an emergence. The ignition of stars is an emergence.
So, consider the difference between the complex organic chemicals surrounding (and no doubt feeding) the first life when it emerged.
Consider the difference between the discrete sperm and egg before fertilisation and the resultant embryo.
Consider the difference between the superheated and compressed gas of a proto star and the star after nuclear ignition.
Consider the difference between the state of reality just before the big bang and then after it.
Reality changes in a plateau-to-plateau manner - be it from the release of potential energy to earthquakes to storms to learning to growth to decline and dying. In each case there are slow, seemingly imperceptible, changes with a gradual buildup of pressure, and once the pressure reaches a threshold there is "sudden" change. Yet the "seeds" of change lay subtly within the apparent stasis.
No, I have mean and weak gifts, just that I have finally learned to pay closer attention to actual reality and how it works by reducing focus on human games.PauloL wrote: ↑Tue Sep 12, 2017 10:06 pmYour full style is all present here: clarity, balance, and transparency, but simplistic notions of your delicacy mask exceptional power of your finest masterpiece, exploiting chromatic suspensions.
It is only through recognizing the violence and sensuality at the center of your thoughts that we can make a start towards a comprehension of its structures and an insight into its magnificence. In a paradoxical way, your superficial characterization of life can help us to see daemon more steadily. In all of its supreme expressions, there is something shockingly voluptuous.
You have a gift for absorbing and adapting valuable features of all works ever done and thought around the mistery of existence, from creation to evolution and perhaps, I'd dare say lowly, even further.
Dunno what bible you're reading, but most say something along these lines:
"The Lord God formed man from the dust of the ground" I would agree completely, what did you eat for your meal, didn't it either grow in the dirt, was an animal that ate what grew in the dirt? Does what you eat not form what you are? Humans usually take their first breath when they are born, and the rib could be an analogy to the genetic origin of another human being. The Bible was written by stone age nomads that didn't understand anything about genetics and couldn't understand anything about it, everything was written in the form of mythology.uwot wrote: ↑Tue Sep 12, 2017 11:02 pmDunno what bible you're reading, but most say something along these lines:
Then the LORD God formed a man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being. Genesis 2:7.
Then the LORD God made a woman from the rib he had taken out of the man, and he brought her to the man. Genesis 2:22.