<HTML>Hi All:
Here's my opinion on my own question. There are many like Mikey who accept whole heartedly that "Man" "evolved" from a former primate now long since vanished. The problem I have with this is how and when did "Man" first realize that he indeed was man. When exactly did "he/she/it " first look at a reflection in a pool of water and realize that it was himself and that he was intelligent. At what stage did the brain suddenly become capable of contemplating the cosmos and indeed start thinking about a creator. I do not feel that the border line can be tool making, nor do I believe it can be a group thing but was it an individual thing ? . It must have been an individual thing ( was it ? ) but then how does this get transferred in genes. I constantly try to imagine "Lucy" and how she was thinking. Was it on my level ? Einsteins level ? The level of a child ? The level of a moron ? The level of a mongoloid ? Was it immediately intelligent or was it a gradual process ?
The question I have to all believers in evolution is simply when did we begin to think and at what level did it start ? Are our brains decaying or did we ever possess the ability to use all of it ?
How about some of the tribes throughout the world basically still living in the stone age untill quite recently but still with the brain of "Man" and still capable of knowing and learning all we know but never bothering to use it. Why ?
Any answers ?
Hmmmm ... A "creator" here would fit.! As much as I like Sitchin's theory of the Annunaki it can't explain where they ( the Annunaki ) came from. It is indeed all very frustrating.
It is claimed our brain continually got bigger but how does this make sense if we only use a very small percentage of it. Where is the logic in this ? Why has it gotten this large only not to be used. Is it lying in wait for something or did we once use it all and now have lost this ability ?
Just wondering aloud again.
Cheers
Don Barone</HTML>