Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Will mankind continue to evolve with war and conflicts?

Will mankind continue to evolve with war and conflicts?
Today I posted another question on my Yahoo page about 'Mutation and evolution of humans', in spite of having my own concrete answer to it. I just wanted to know how humans would answer the question, but I have already laid out my unbiased conclusion to it considering the basic aspect of human behavior.

I'm referring to the question that I posted,. "Will mankind continue to evolve with war and conflicts?" How would you answer that question? The human evolution of reconstructing our ancestors to get concrete facts that could answer the elusive questions 'Who we are and where we come from' endlessly continues. This research allows scientists to work aggressively to gather scientific data, factual information and even follow up questions about human origins. But I am not going to talk about that because I think we don't actually need to further our research. All we need to do is just observe how we behave.

You can do your own scientific readings instead of going to church every Sunday to listen to one man telling you how to live your personal life according to him. Come on, be sensible humans! Try something more factual.

I once mentioned that to you Mr. Lee, about my radical idea of human origins, but I don't think you understood or weren't paying attention.

The evolution pre-programmed in our DNA with limited application was installed with specific functions to create and to destroy. You already know the rest of the installed applications, the human dramas, arrogance, love and romance, depression and grief, fear and war.


Will mankind continue to evolve with war and conflicts? Yes! Mankind will continue to evolve regardless of war and conflict. It has been programmed and that program can be altered but it won't secure your total freedom as long as you continue to live within the system.

I am halfway through Terence McKenna's "Theory of Human Evolution". He theorizes that "as the North African jungles receded toward the end of the most recent ice age, giving way to grasslands, a branch of our tree-dwelling primate ancestors left the branches and took up a life out in the open -- following around herds of ungulates, nibbling what they could along the way."

No comments :

Post a Comment