Journal
Entry Number One: First Things First
…as
well as early attempts to impose meaning on the world through art, ritual and
religion. (Strayer pg.5)
Is
this attempting to say that there is no inherent meaning to existence, only
meaning that we impose upon existence? It reminds me of the philosophical
question, “ If a tree falls in the woods and there is no one around to hear it,
does it make a sound?” Sound waves exist whether or not they are heard. So, is
that a question of the inheritability of sound making waves, or the ears
ability to hear those waves? That question always kind of bugged me for this reason; squirrels
have ears, so they would hear it if
“no one” was around. I always took the “no one” in that question as
encompassing only humans. If it did not only mean humans, I do not think the
word “one” would have been used in "no one". Back to the original thought: if Homo sapiens
did not inhabit the earth would life on this planet have meaning? My first
reaction is to say duh. I truly believe that life and all of the other
existence that exists out there in the Universe(s) has meaning that does not
need us to impose anything upon it. But I think this is trying to say that maybe
Homo erectus did not think about meaning, just dinner. So does meaning need to
be comprehended for it to exist? Can meaning exist without being pointed out or recognized? For
meaning to exist does the question why have to be asked first? I’m actually not up to thinking
anymore about that question right now, but I am interested in thinking about it again soon, and I am very interested in what other people have to say.
I
was thinking about why historians have not written a lot about the Paleolithic
time period and I thought that maybe some historians are propagandists for the
non-nomadic life because that is where the money is. It was just a small thought.
Does anyone else thing that Native Americans have a slightly Asian facial structure, and if so, is that because their ancestors
crossed the Bering Strait Land Mass from Asia? Also, I found it interesting that the
people of the Americas did not really have any larger animals to domesticate
(The Southern portion had the llama. Never trust a llama.). It made me think
that might be why the Native Americans were still living more of a
hunter/gatherer life style into the late Modern time period. They were not
attempting to dominate nature but work with nature; that is more of a
Paleolithic philosophy.
When
I was reading about the Venus figurines, which had been found from Spain to
Russia, I wondered when the collective consciousness developed? Was it when our
brains became bigger in the Homo sapiens? Or was it present even as far back as
the Homo habilis? Do you know?
It
is mind blowing how fast we moved from being in communion with nature to
attempting to dominate it. I wonder if because for 240,000 years (more if you
consider Homo habilis a homie) nature had the upper hand and could kick our ass
at will without much of a fight; I mean we had fire, some stones and a fur or two,
but really we did not have a chance against her. That ice age must have sucked.
So, I wonder if once the weather mellowed out and we could have a bit more
control, we ran with it? The rate of change in our relationship with
nature just feels to me like some pent up frustration was there and as soon as
the climate was ripe… pounce. I just cannot wrap my mind around how drastic the nature/human relationship changed for most Homo sapiens. This change also
goes hand in hand with our relationship to other Homo sapiens. The radical
departure form a predominantly egalitarian construct to a class system happened
with such ease. As Strayer states in the book, The Code of Hammurabi talks
about slavery like they had been doing it forever, but it had
only been 1500 years since the first civilizations began. Where did that way of
interacting stem from? Mind-boggling.
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