In the moment they found the monolith from Space Odyssey.
2007-01-29 15:52:22
·
answer #1
·
answered by Lost. at. Sea. 7
·
0⤊
1⤋
Depending on what you believe I think the answer is different. If you believe that God created evolution then maybe you would find your answer in the Bible. If you don't believe in evolution then maybe your answer is in the Bible or some other religious book.
If you are agnostic or an athiest you might believe religion was created as soon as man could communicate.
But nobody can answer it and everyone agree. I think from even a historical and strictly scientifical point of view there wouldn't be an answer that would be 100% satisfactory.
2007-01-30 00:29:22
·
answer #2
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋
Better to ask at what point in Gods evolution was man created.
2007-01-29 23:48:50
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋
God creation supported an unequal man/woman society; the first inequality.
Our sun may be discovered to be a magnatar, which rapidly loses energy. If the original energy from the magnatar was from the equatorial region and gradually decreased as the polar emissions increased, you might wind up with what we have today--almost no solar equatorial emissions except when a delayed magnetic reversal occurs, like in 2013. The solar emissions were stronger- we now have celluar looseness which disengages our past abilities.
I propose women originally had the ability to control their pregnancies at will as most animals do now; this failure led almost immediately to male dominance and the puppet control religion.
2013-11-28 12:11:24
·
answer #4
·
answered by kate s 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
You question assumes there was an evolution of man. The Indians split off from the rest of the population many thousands of years ago and lived separate from all others for many millennia. Yet, when re-united with those other humans, nothing had changed nor "evolved." Inter-breeding was still possible, food eaten and diseases susceptible to were the same. Why didn't their human bodies evolve some differences? Could it be simply that the macro-evolution you're assuming doesn't happen?
2007-01-29 23:49:04
·
answer #5
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
2⤋
The earliest known evidence of human religious behavior was recently found in south central Africa, a cave that had been furnished for ritual purposes about 70,000 years ago. The cave was dated by bone and wood fragments found among the ritual furnishings.
This is about 20,000 years older than the famous Neanderthal burial site with the remains of funeral flowers.
We probably developed religion at about the same time as we developed language, and new discoveries keep pushing this further and further back into the past.
2007-01-29 23:49:29
·
answer #6
·
answered by Joni DaNerd 6
·
0⤊
1⤋
It was at cyclic redundancy error point in man's evolution that he created god. His questions kept getting more and more recursive and he could not answer them and so he made up a God, or Gods, and he tricked down the cycle, and had the answer.
2007-01-29 23:52:24
·
answer #7
·
answered by Qyn 5
·
1⤊
1⤋
Don't you mean "at what point in God's evolution did he create man"?
2007-01-29 23:48:52
·
answer #8
·
answered by steelyvan1 2
·
0⤊
2⤋
You got it backwards crow james... it was a point in the evolution of God's universe that man was created.
You know who the creator is. What we don't know is; when He brought us into being during the evolution of His universe.
2007-01-29 23:51:11
·
answer #9
·
answered by the old dog 7
·
0⤊
2⤋
When man started walking on two feet and drawing. Even the earliest scribblings on the cave wall depicted things they worshipped. The bulls for food. The woman as the giver of life. Man as a great hunter. They even beleived you take things with you when you died.
2007-01-29 23:50:35
·
answer #10
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋