But he just wanted to show that civilization 10,000 years ago doesn't mean it's human.. He basically said that linguistic evidence would be something we can look at to determine it.. seeing what they think and feel.. what they value. We don't have it > 6000 years ago.
I'm pretty sure that anatomically human creatures would also be spiritually human creatures. I think that there will be a lot more evidence around that will be discovered that breaks this imaginary 6000 year boundary. I've read about a lot of artifacts that are older than 6000 years and show clearly human (as opposed to purely instictive animal) behavior. This includes musical instruments, ritual burials, carved maps, relatively sophisticated tools, etc.
I found something about the oldest writing being 3200BCE.
Pictograms are a form of writing and I think that cave paintings are one of the earliest forms of writing. They're meant to convey a message that can be read. They also may have had spiritual meaning.
homo sapians - human in body - meant to be around as far as back as 200,000 years ago.. would have been the ones that did cave paintings which are as old as 30,000 years..
Yes the paintings in France were done by early Europeans. The details in the images show intelligence and artistry. I'm proud of those paintings. I consider them part of the European heritage in which I share a part.
He argued that a cave painting shows the thing that drew it is good at drawing, but they don't show much more. Sometimes a picture of an animal.. so maybe the person that drew it was hungry and decided to draw the animal. We don't know.
They're just too good of paintings to be random drawings. The artists were skilled.
They would have had a voice box, but that doesn't prove they are human. Maybe their language was simple.. we don't know the content of what they were saying..
We do know that they had enough planning skill to live through the harsh environment of the European winters, which would have included communicating in hunting and storing enough food to survive through those bare months, and cooperation for such things as keeping fires going and working skins and furs with scrapers and other specialized tools.
I suppose what he says works to say to bible skeptics "hah, you haven't disproven me.. you have to provide linguistic evidence, because that is one thing that, an analysis of might show they were human".
I think expecting linguistic evidence from a long-dead language is a bit silly. However I do think there's sufficient evidence that they did communicate with one another in meaningful ways and produced some of the earliest technologies and works of art with their intelligent minds.
The lack of linguistic evidence, I suppose, would strengthen the biblical position alot if people expected it but couldn't find it. But , it's interesting that apparently blacks didn't have any writing until around 1800CE or so, when christian missionaries introduced it to them.
Some of them are decent human beings, so I'd say they are part of the human "race" - from Adam.
Oh I think they're part of the human race in the sense of being able to communicate with God, but they are different in significant ways from Asians and whites. I think they're a little further removed from those two than Asians and whites are from one another.
You suggest earlier that Adam represents Humanity. I heard a much more literal statement on that.. That the thing that distinguished Adam from other creatures, or even things before him if there were. Was that Adam had a human soul. G-d breathed it into him. Anything before him is not considered man. So from a biblical perspective, it's a human body and a human soul - both literally - that maketh the man.
I'd agree with that for the most part, but I think we have to look earlier for that moment than most scholars are currently looking. I think human history goes back far earlier than the cities and irrigation agriculture. I think smaller communities were around a long time before that and were fully human.
I did wonder if any were white.. I just read that homo sapians entered europe 150,000 years ago and skin got lighter.
I tend to agree with a mixture between the Out of Africa theory and the multiregional theory. I think that originally all humans were from Africa but there were several waves of migration out of Africa with various closely related hominids. One wave that came out and went to Asia for example was Homo erectus, and then later another wave of humans came out and went to Asia and might have cross-bred with some of the earlier hominids. Europeans might have cross bred somewhat with closely related Neanderthals, and God-knows-what the Africans crossed with since all the hominids came from there anyway.
Another idea is that there wasn't any crossbreeding and the different races just developed differently on their respective continents. This could also be true.
It is true that the first people likely had dark skin and then the skin lightened as people moved north into Europe and Asia to absorb more Vitamin D.