Author Topic: How do you think humans were first created?  (Read 7806 times)

Anyone heard of the coccyx bone in your body? It's useless now but it's proof that our ancestors used to have tails.

Anyone heard of the coccyx bone in your body? It's useless now but it's proof that our ancestors used to have tails.
Its been discussed.

Anyone heard of the coccyx bone in your body? It's useless now but it's proof that our ancestors used to have tails.

Plus, that stuff in the corner of our eyes are the remnants of an internal eyelid iirc


oh :(
It's pretty commonly accepted by creationists that evolution did happen and the universe is older than 5,000 years.

We can lose half of the blood in our body and we still wont die. We have special energy hidden in our body which activates trough stress and fear
I think that special energy is called your spleen. It holds a reserve of blood that it releases when your blood pressure/oxygen levels are low enough. This is a measurable phenomena, unlike your 'energy' hypothesis which is just new age woo woo.

It's pretty commonly accepted by creationists that evolution did happen and the universe is older than 5,000 years.
This post is also paradoxical.

This post is also paradoxical.
I don't know why they still stick to creationism after being shown the wonder of science, but it's not my decision.

I think that special energy is called your spleen. It holds a reserve of blood that it releases when your blood pressure/oxygen levels are low enough. This is a measurable phenomena, unlike your 'energy' hypothesis which is just new age woo woo.

Sounds like something James Randi would say, I'm a huge fan of him.

Modern predators rarely use endurance running for hunting. And our eyes evolved for foraging, not hunting. This hypothesis apparently faces a lot of scrutiny.
I don't really know that much about this stuff but I know that our eyes developed in the front of our head in order to create a field of depth perception, that unfortunately, isn't all that necessary when foraging. Eyes in the front of your head is a trait related to specifically to hunting predators, with maybe a few exceptions that I cant remember.
      Moreover, since we are intelligent creatures, the likely hood that we evolved from a sole foraging species doesn't make all that much sense. What develops and promotes intelligence is hunting and laying traps for other animals, not foraging in the grass for berries. That came trait however, developed alongside with our endurance for running, and it later became dominant after we figured out it was way easier to find berries than to chase after deer or what not. Foraging animals don't become intelligent, hunters do.

Aedra, definitely.
Don't tell me you're a daedra worshiper!

Hotter temperatures and movement into more arid climate.
Fur makes you hot, which isn't helpful if you overheat.

And it can restrict movement somewhat, in more flexible species such as primates. Hence the lack of long fur.
Then we became white because we went to colder climates
amirite

We were tiny cells of bacteria maybe.  :cookieMonster:


I think that special energy is called your spleen. It holds a reserve of blood that it releases when your blood pressure/oxygen levels are low enough. This is a measurable phenomena, unlike your 'energy' hypothesis which is just new age woo woo.

I thought he was talking about adrenaline.

Sounds like something James Randi would say, I'm a huge fan of him.
James Randi is my hero :3

I don't really know that much about this stuff but I know that our eyes developed in the front of our head in order to create a field of depth perception, that unfortunately, isn't all that necessary when foraging. Eyes in the front of your head is a trait related to specifically to hunting predators, with maybe a few exceptions that I cant remember.
      Moreover, since we are intelligent creatures, the likely hood that we evolved from a sole foraging species doesn't make all that much sense. What develops and promotes intelligence is hunting and laying traps for other animals, not foraging in the grass for berries. That came trait however, developed alongside with our endurance for running, and it later became dominant after we figured out it was way easier to find berries than to chase after deer or what not. Foraging animals don't become intelligent, hunters do.

Which is why we were both: Persistence Hunting

Also the title is a trick question, humans were not created, we simply happened.