Wibbs wrote: » Don't drink the milk. Call a coroner cowroner.
whatawaster81 wrote: » I like the way you're all in here on the Neanderthals had fire bandwagon. Again as I said it's a theory that they did not use it as extensively. Please see below article taken from study.http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3050984/Did-Neanderthals-die-couldn-t-master-fire-Cooking-food-given-modern-humans-edge.html Makes interesting reading to me. Again science cannot agree nor explain.
Mister Vain wrote: » Why does my piss come out in two different directions?
Neanderthals use of fire is still a highly controversial issue
duploelabs wrote: » You've actually got taste buds in your colon. You're used to the 'taste' of your own **** and farts, therefore it's not so repulsive to you but is to everyone else
kneemos wrote: » If you think you are you must be.
ScumLord wrote: » Neanderthals had fire, by many accounts they were at least as sophisticated as humans and had bigger brains. They're problem is they didn't trade or socialise outside of their own familiar group.
EndaHonesty wrote: » It's pointless...
maudgonner wrote: » Why other people's farts smell worse to you than your own. (Obviously I don't know this to be true, since I'm a laydee and have never farted in my life. But I've heard it's the case)
Steve012 wrote: » Good points lol, but if I think.. therefore I am!
dar100 wrote: » How do you get the fig into the fig roll
ScumLord wrote: » We were talking about humans, why bring neanderthals into it?
EndaHonesty wrote: » What have modern humans living in London got to do with Neanderthal man?! Humans have been trying to wipe each other off the face the earth forever. The human capacity for cruelty is simply incredible. To it's own species, to other species and to the planet as a whole. "We're even nice to the animals we kill and eat"?!!
Maximus Alexander wrote: » I don't know if you actually exist either or are just a figment of my imagination, but at some point we have to accept that we can rely on our observations.
ScumLord wrote: » We were talking about humans, why bring neanderthals into it? They haven't. Humans have been having territorial disputes since they started farming. There isn't much evidence of large scale violence before that time. Even early territorial disputes were borderline sports, they wouldn't have been battles as we know them. Violence is a pretty fundamental part of life on this planet, it's not surprising we are violent, it's what we were born out of. Fighting was about the only way of communicating displeasure up until humans came along. Then humans began trade. No other animal has trade relations, most other animals can't sympathise or empathise. Our capacity for a lot of things is incredible. Do you think if a bacteria was damaging the planet it would stop? It wouldn't, the rest of life would just have to adapt to the new world created by bacteria. I use bacteria because they're the only other type of creature able to have an influence on the environment like we have, and they don't care at all what happens. They don't have the capacity to care. We've only recently realised we're affecting the environment and we're doing something about it. Just compare how a farmer treats cattle to how a lion would treat cattle.
EndaHonesty wrote: » What have modern humans living in London got to do with Neanderthal man?!
Humans have been trying to wipe each other off the face the earth forever.
The human capacity for cruelty is simply incredible. To it's own species, to other species and to the planet as a whole.
"We're even nice to the animals we kill and eat"?!!
kneemos wrote: » We don't even know if there was a big bang,never mind when time began.
ScumLord wrote: » If you compare humans to every other animal what stands out is that we don't fight nearly as often as other animals, when was the last time you got into a fight? We need to be inhibreated before there's any real danger of fighting for prowess. There's 20 million people living in London and getting along on a daily basis. It's hard to get two dogs to walk past each other on the street. When we do fight it's on a massive level but outside of war there's very little violence in your average human community. War gives a totally skewed image of humans acceptance of violence. Outside of war we're even nice to the animal we kill and eat.
Maximus Alexander wrote: » There is no 'before' the big bang. Time begins at the moment of the big bang, and just like you can't go South from the South pole, you can't go before the big bang.
EndaHonesty wrote: » Lolz I think you've got it backwards, upside down and inside out. You don't have to be an Anthropology Professor to see it's humans who have a need to fight with each other, not "animals".
ScumLord wrote: » Neanderthals had fire, by many accounts they were at least as sophisticated as humans and had bigger brains. They're problem is they didn't trade or socialise outside of their own familiar group. Two groups of humans could come across each other and would probably have a meal together, do some trading, maybe swap some members and go about their merry way. If neanderthals were like most other animals on this planet when they came across another group of neanderthals they probably started fighting each other.
Vinculus wrote: » Was the big bang the first big bang or was there other big bangs before that big bang?
whatawaster81 wrote: » Who or what killed of the Neantherdals.
whatawaster81 wrote: » Oh I've no doubt we interbred as up to 2% of our DNA is Neantherdal DNA. It's funny how we thrived and they vanished. I've seen multiple theories from us wiping them out to the fact they could not harness fire so couldn't get the calories from food or avoid disease. It's just scientists can't agree what exactly happened.
brevity wrote: » What happens to the other sock.