Belindi wrote: ↑January 24th, 2024, 6:23 am
My dog lacks hands so cannot use a tin opener. However he can use his paws to cause his toy to eject desirable food. Moreover, an ape has been observed creatively using planks of wood to bridge a pond of water.
I say "creatively" where you say "conceptual leap". You attribute the creative event to some uncaused idea. What caused the idea? You attribute the cause thus:- "to unite hunter gatherer tribes".
True, Muhammad used the Abrahamic concept of God 's supremacy to unite warring Arabian tribes . Muhammad was a resounding success in that initiative conceptually, politically, militarily, and financially. Muhammad was a trader and it stands to reason his first incentive was to facilitate trade in Arabia. I mention Muhammad in order to show creativity, i.e. conceptual leaps, don't arise spontaneously but are embedded in preexisting and actual ways of life. There is no God-shaped hole in human psychology; and similarly there is no creative dog toy -shaped -hole in dog psychology. Nor is there a creative Use of Planks -shaped -hole in ape psychology.
Use of practical and conceptual tools can't happen unless the animal in question can abstract an attribute from e.g.Abrahamic God, e.g. food dispensing toy, and e.g. wooden planks.
Human language evolves by way of metaphor ,that is to say adoption of new symbols . Other species lack the vocal anatomy that allows humans to voice these new symbols. You mention cave paintings and jewellery and these too symbolise ideas and some ornaments also are credited with magic powers including in the present day, notably in religious rituals such as ornate weddings and ornate funerals. Again, humans have hands with thumbs which enable humans to make stuff that other species cannot make. There is no mystery here-----no mysterious something in the human psyche.
I'm aware of animal intelligence - signing apes, puzzle solving crows etc, but it's not a patch on human intelligence. And this is what Shreeve is saying. Human intelligence is not just more of the same, it's qualitatively distinct, and furthermore, there isn't a record of fumbling attempts toward artefacts that demonstrate a truly human mode of thought. It occurred very suddenly - the same stone hand axes for two million years, and then bang, out of nowhere, improved tools, cave paintings, jewellery, burial of the dead etc. This was 50,000 years ago. The Abrahamic religions are 1800 BC - 500 AD. Very recent in evolutionary terms.
Do you imagine, say the Mesopotamian civilisation in the Euphrates/Tigris valley 10,000 years ago, didn't have a God? Of course they did, because God was necessary to multi-tribal social organisation; an objective authority for moral laws common to all. Otherwise, how do two hunter gatherer tribes - each ruled by alpha males, join together? One tribe can kill the males and kidnap the females of another tribe, but they can't cooperate unless there's an objective authority for law. Any dispute over sex or food is liable to dissolve the fledgling society into its tribal components unless the dispute can be settled with respect to authoritative moral code agreed to by all. That's religion.
Do you understand the Watchmaker Argument? Dawkins restates it in The Blind Watchmaker - from Parsons in Natural Theology 1802, who was restating Cicero - the ancient Roman scholar. We can well imagine the idea goes back much further than that; that people saw an appearance of design in nature, and inferred the existence of a designer. That is what I mean by a 'God shaped hole in the sky.' I'm saying this idea would have been self evident to those capable of a truly human mode of thought - which, according to Shreeve, occurs around 50,000 years ago. (I am aware this dating is disputed. That older artefacts claiming to demonstrate human intelligence have been discovered since. Precise dates don't matter to my argument.)
You're absolutely right to talk about magic charms and such; and you have to wonder why the heightened sense of superstition, if it isn't from a paranoia we're being watched by a creator God, if they were not trying to discover the means - or pretend to, the power of Creation? The archetypal God is a Creator God; an explanation for evidence of design in nature. Otherwise a rock is just a rock, a cloud is just a cloud. Instead, even now, our psychology is wildly superstitious, like it's built on a superstitious foundation. We have to train people to overcome it, again and again in subsequent generations. It's for these reasons I speculate that what Shreeve calls 'the creative explosion' - was a consequence of a basic tool using human animal, making a leap by asking 'Who made me? Who made the world?' - inferring a concept of a Creator and being thrown into a world of superstition, auspices and portents!
Anyway, I've banged on long enough - so will close. But just want to remind us both where we came in:
Belindi wrote: ↑January 13th, 2024, 6:37 am
When we personified God then God became objective. In other words, we make reality all up without exception.
Mercury wrote:
In my view, objective reality exists - and has a God shaped hole in it in terms of first cause, and apparent design. Subjectivism is massively over-emphasised in Western philosophy for political reasons; freeing the state - historically based on the divine right of Kings, from responsibility to scientific truth.