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To: Dayuhan who wrote (750)3/1/2002 10:25:11 PM
From: thames_sider  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21057
 
Gods were developed to provide the carrot and the stick needed to induce individuals to place the moral code - the interests of the pack - above their own individual interests.

I think you under-rate curiosity and the human need to perceive patterns.
Our brains are evolved to inquire and experiment - as a species, this worked well in finding new foods and defences in the rapidly-changing world of grasslands and ice ages. Once the capability for abstraction was reached (probably as a result of language, allowing the depiction of threats and possibilities) then I think it was inevitable that people would try and explain everything, as best they could.

Meanwhile, pattern recognition is another key abstract ability - developed from a primarily visual sense (to spot threats, escape/attack routes and food) with the abstractive power of the mind. Hence we classify, order and collate, from a minimal age (watch a small child enjoying sorting toys, by colour, size or other differentiation clear to them) - some extremes of this become Asperger's, or autism, but more functional extremes may be classed as genius.
And because we seek patterns in all areas, we find them - coincidence becomes significant, luck starts following a trend, and events must be patterned by design...

and that's JMHO. But it's late even for me so I'll return anon.



To: Dayuhan who wrote (750)3/2/2002 8:38:31 AM
From: Poet  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21057
 
Humans are pack animals

This is news to me. Citation or other dependable evidence, please?

I grant you that in general, humans enjoy the companionship of others and as children, need it for survival, but I'd hardly call us pack animals on the order of dogs, let's say.