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1 - Development and the Divine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 August 2019

J. L. Schellenberg
Affiliation:
Mount St Vincent University, Halifax, Nova Scotia
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Summary

It’s interesting to think about how ideas we take for granted haven’t always been lodged in someone’s head. They were once in no one’s head and had to emerge, whether among skinny humans, hulking Neanderthals, the tall but less brainy Homo erectus, or someone even further back in our family tree. Some individual or group had to think of using fire to serve human purposes. That was quite possibly erectus. Somebody dreamed up hafting a stone point onto a wooden shaft. That may have happened as far back as Homo heidelbergensis. And someone thought of the wheel. We humans of course were the first to produce a wheel, but whether we were also the first to think of one is anyone’s guess.

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Chapter
Information
Religion after Science
The Cultural Consequences of Religious Immaturity
, pp. 7 - 18
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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