The Roots of Religion: Genevieve Von Petzinger at TEDxVictoria

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Комментарии • 3 тыс.

  • @jasonevans7260
    @jasonevans7260 2 года назад +111

    She's really great. I think I'd enjoy a much longer lecture on this topic.

    • @johnedwards7899
      @johnedwards7899 2 года назад +4

      Maybe she's written a book on this subject. Would be worth searching for.

    • @jwbrook
      @jwbrook Год назад +2

      Makes me want to sign up for a class at the community college or something.

    • @timothyhoffman3470
      @timothyhoffman3470 Год назад +3

      Look at the top post^^ Maybe that will help you !~ Religion came from the under developed brains~ Easy to see!~ & know!~

    • @DW_Kiwi
      @DW_Kiwi Год назад

      Then read the bible

    • @supplican
      @supplican 10 месяцев назад

      The bile says nothing about the origin of religion over 100,000 years before it existed

  • @jeffreymcneal1507
    @jeffreymcneal1507 2 года назад +93

    Speaking in a colloquial fashion, Ms. Von Petzinger breathes new life into the ancient mysteries of what it is to be us and how we might have arrived there. Utterly brilliant and insightful.

    • @forestdwellerresearch6593
      @forestdwellerresearch6593 Год назад +4

      Not if it's incorrect. And there are definitely dodgy assumptions in this talk.

    • @mihirvyas5041
      @mihirvyas5041 Год назад +12

      @@forestdwellerresearch6593 but until it is proven not to be possible and so "incorrect" as you say, it does make a lot of logical sense. We all accept what she says may not be entirely or even remotely correct, but in light of the lack of a better theory, I'll go with her rather than your pointless observation.

    • @kn9ioutom
      @kn9ioutom Год назад +1

      WELL ! ALL RELIGIONS ARE CREATED BY PEOPLE ! THERFORE MAN MADE !!!

    • @forestdwellerresearch6593
      @forestdwellerresearch6593 11 месяцев назад

      @@mihirvyas5041 No it does not make logical sense. Logic would observe the absence of any evidence of prehistoric religion and conclude there probably was no religion. Don't confuse logic with speculation and wishful thinking. That is what is pointless.

    • @supplican
      @supplican 10 месяцев назад

      Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence

  • @drakemia4079
    @drakemia4079 Год назад +38

    She is a very good speaker I could listen all day

  • @dobysaurus
    @dobysaurus 4 года назад +36

    Working on something creative, especially trying to reinvent something from scratch, gives a few people known to me a certain high which they relate to at a spiritual level, even if they are not followers of conventional religion. This talk makes so much sense.

    • @juanjoperez7537
      @juanjoperez7537 Год назад +2

      When you're coding and a few intrinsic relationships click together, about a thousand lines of code write themselves ... almost without bugs

    • @jacksimpson-rogers1069
      @jacksimpson-rogers1069 Год назад +1

      I heartily agree. There are seven vices enumerated by the C of E, and about this they are correct:
      Gluttony, Lust, Sloth, Avarice, Envy, Pride, and Wrath. The first three are vices of the body, the other four are spiritual. But if we consider refusal to use our brains in various cases as Sloth, that is also a spiritual vice.
      To imagine that Christianity requires the believer to accept the Creation myth in the Book of Genesis, when we know that the Earth is NOT flat as described there, is spiritual sloth.

  • @busyhive2346
    @busyhive2346 5 лет назад +345

    There should only be one religion , that of caring for your fellow human. It’s called Humanity , try it !

    • @shawnstatzer95
      @shawnstatzer95 Год назад +15

      Yes, but humans are not the most important of the universe. Humanity seems to imply humans to humans, but to regard all existence (both animate and inanimate) to have valued purpose, than we would be doing a great service.

    • @akun10years10
      @akun10years10 Год назад +13

      Lmao humanity. What about the animals?

    • @noahwinslow2692
      @noahwinslow2692 Год назад +16

      I absolutely agree!!! Plus the animals of course ❤️

    • @patcomerford5596
      @patcomerford5596 Год назад +7

      The only 'should' I should on myself and others in when I 'should not' should on myself and others, otherwise the secular 'should' is no different to the religious 'should'. Your comment is so autocratic in tone and is no different to that of religious fanatics.

    • @isaacgloc1542
      @isaacgloc1542 Год назад +8

      We're insignificant

  • @oldskooldriver9379
    @oldskooldriver9379 5 лет назад +224

    My cats have religion, they believe if they run around the house knocking stuff off of tables and counters and generally making a loud ruckus for an hour or so, then they will get fed. In reality, I feed them at 9am and 6pm everyday, regardless of how they behave or when they start their ritualized antics. But they sure do believe their highly correlated behavior is causal to their feedings. And they have escalated the rituals over time.

    • @ingenuity168
      @ingenuity168 2 года назад +11

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @virginiawatson153
      @virginiawatson153 Год назад +19

      My cat also has religion. He believes that if he yowls loud & long enough when I'm sleeping, I will wake up & see to whatever he considers his immediate need. So far, his religious belief has been proven true. Perhaps loud, long yowls are a form of prayer.

    • @ingenuity168
      @ingenuity168 Год назад +5

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @davidav8orpflanz561
      @davidav8orpflanz561 Год назад +17

      Instead of praying to a God, I make wish requests to my cats...same results!

    • @STScott-qo4pw
      @STScott-qo4pw Год назад +22

      sooner or later you will realise dogs have owners, Cats have staff.
      In ancient egypt we worshipped them as gods. They have never forgotten.

  • @ruatarengsicolneyrengsi8924
    @ruatarengsicolneyrengsi8924 Год назад +12

    Really animated, lucid, and clear lecture on the origin of religion and prehistory. Thankyou.

  • @rodneyrenfro5375
    @rodneyrenfro5375 4 года назад +16

    when i was a kid..me and my dog would play chase. I would chase him and he would chase me in turns. I ran around the well house two times in a row, and Brandi, a basset, stopped, and went the other way to catch me going around. Animals use planning and have 'visualized' fore thought capabilities. They use it in hunting as well. Human huge brains has taken it to another level with religion, but I see many aspect of our thinking and behavior very similar and relatable.

  • @morganssongs8834
    @morganssongs8834 6 лет назад +237

    I really like this speaker. I like how she was able to present the information without picking sides about religion, plus, she didn't act paternalistic toward primal cultures.

    • @towo_137
      @towo_137 5 лет назад +2

      what info? i wanna see some documents that she did not type up herself!

    • @MKTElM
      @MKTElM 5 лет назад +7

      To act paternalistic towards your distant forefathers is patronising . I'm glad she was tactful and was careful not to !

    • @socksumi
      @socksumi 4 года назад +2

      Why shouldn't she pick sides?

    • @johndemeritt3460
      @johndemeritt3460 4 года назад +23

      @@socksumi , because as a scientist, she's supposed to examine the phenomenon for how it works. In that regard, the questions of "which religion is best?" or "is religion better than other ways of knowing?" are irrelevant. As social scientists, we want to know how social phenomena work and how one thing in a category of social phenomena differs from others.
      There are no sides: we can either explain the phenomenon or not.

    • @socksumi
      @socksumi 4 года назад +8

      @@johndemeritt3460 Explaining phenomenon is picking sides. There are facts and there are unproven speculations. A good scientist will not embrace speculations, only that which is demonstrated by evidence. Scientists must absolutely pick sides in everything they study and hold to that which resounds with observed facts.

  • @terryhebert1567
    @terryhebert1567 7 лет назад +17

    MS. Genevieve, what a wonderful presentation !! I have seen you in two vids,on youtube, but I will search for more. THANKS

  • @shantil7764
    @shantil7764 Год назад

    She has the heart of a teacher !!! so inspiring and passionate. thank you !

  • @rameshneupane4094
    @rameshneupane4094 4 года назад +4

    Amazing talk ! Loved your work and presentation 😍😍

  • @xjuanp
    @xjuanp 8 лет назад +55

    Fascinating research. I just watched another one of her TED's and she's really interesting, deep but still understandable.
    Trying to find "the particle" of something is just wonderful; getting to see "the first" of something; being able to do the "original gesture" that made us who we are, that's marvelous.

    • @xjuanp
      @xjuanp 8 лет назад +35

      +IDNeon357 Thank you for enlighten me with your insults. You certainly convinced me by the use of words that diminish me and many others. It so seems that your judgement is impaired by your geniality.
      The scientist in this conversation spent many years doing research and studying. She arrives to her strong conclusions based on such research.
      By contrast, you come here empty handed, with only your insults and nothing more than a few poorly redacted sentences to try to change my opinion. Nope. You're going to have to make a better effort or just remain quiet.

    • @BFDT-4
      @BFDT-4 7 лет назад +10

      +IDNeon357 - yes, please remain quiet. Leave the room until you get educated and learn to speak without ad hominems.

    • @gorillaguerillaDK
      @gorillaguerillaDK 6 лет назад +2

      +IDNeon357 no one is saying there wasn't tools before 10K years ago!
      How did you come to that conclusion....?

    • @anthroariel
      @anthroariel 6 лет назад +1

      Juan Pablo Salas S , her info is outdated and selected such that it supports her views. Please do more research. And look around you: animals all demonstrate the ability to use the past to inform actions in the present. There are even papers written on plants reacting to people based on past behavior.

    • @peytonquinn3095
      @peytonquinn3095 4 года назад

      @@IDNeon357 I got a hoot from your humor here:"
      What was a human doing for 100,000 years until supposedly we then discovered it " But it is curious that 'civilization" and technology" seems to have taken a sudden acceleration be it 50K or 100K years ago'

  • @flyingrhinofilms
    @flyingrhinofilms 4 года назад +19

    Utterly bloody fascinating! What a treat of a lecture. Love it! 🙏

  • @johnnymac8732
    @johnnymac8732 Год назад +12

    I found this presentation to be fascinating. By extension, while Ms. Von Petzinger touches upon the use of visual items and themes to bridge the "here and now" with the unfolding of the mental notion of the future and human understanding of the divine, I think it would be interesting to do the same regarding the other senses. For example, certain songs relative to key life transitions, the playing of certain instruments and associated melodies at special life events or ceremonies, and the crafting of certain foods made with specific ingredients and served at key life events or ceremonies. Such things that are meant to "enable bridging" across the time continuum from one generation to the next and from one epoch to the next.

  • @godfreycarmichael
    @godfreycarmichael 2 года назад +9

    Very interesting lecture. I am so thankful for thoughtful, curious people.

  • @jeffreyguilmot8772
    @jeffreyguilmot8772 6 лет назад +59

    This is the second TEDtalk I've seen of this woman. I love how passionate and knowledgeable she is about her field of study.

    • @tkenglander6226
      @tkenglander6226 4 года назад

      She didn't even need notes!! Very impressive indeed!!

  • @mindvolution
    @mindvolution 4 года назад +38

    Evolution of consciousness is an absolutely fascinating fact!

    • @todradmaker4297
      @todradmaker4297 Год назад

      Are you suggesting that at some point in time we were living unconsciously?

    • @mfv2024
      @mfv2024 Год назад

      Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny

    • @todradmaker4297
      @todradmaker4297 Год назад

      @@mfv2024 To be clear, are you saying that the development of an individual organism reflects or relates to the evolution of the species as a whole? And if so, what're you saying about the origin of our consciousness?

    • @joemason8667
      @joemason8667 Год назад

      @@todradmaker4297 Yeah, it started sometime around 2016..

    • @DW_Kiwi
      @DW_Kiwi Год назад

      What is a "fact"?

  • @mvdeano
    @mvdeano 4 года назад +50

    Ah, hard work, and giving your life with passion, curiosity and dedication to discover the real why's of it all. This is what everyone should be listening to on Sundays.

    • @zapkvr
      @zapkvr 3 года назад +1

      Given Margaret Meade was a fraud I hope this lady is a bit more careful. And I hope we are a bit more sceptical

    • @bobschwartz8459
      @bobschwartz8459 Год назад

      exactly!!

  • @sylvester63
    @sylvester63 4 года назад +4

    Dr. Genevieve Von Petzinger beautifully shares anthropological evidence of early human behaviour and the beginning of belief systems some 50,000 years ago.

  • @DimitriBoyarski
    @DimitriBoyarski 6 лет назад +613

    "Religion is a phase where species become intelligent enough to ask profund questions but not intelligent enough to answer them"
    - forgotten where I read this.

    • @MichaelJonesC-4-7
      @MichaelJonesC-4-7 6 лет назад +36

      Religions are our failed sciences.

    • @jean-louispech4921
      @jean-louispech4921 6 лет назад +37

      Religion is a toll for people with fear of uncertainity.
      what there is after death?
      what is the mean of the world and life?
      etc...
      This peoples need to have an answer giving them some kind of order, killing their anguish and fears etc... they can't stand to live without answer. An answer instead of no answer, an answer at all cost ( liberty, love, life, etc.... ).....
      Traditions and rituals are part of this kind of mind.
      Religious fanatics are the best exemple.
      Religions give made answers to their followers.
      Non religious peoples accept to live without answer, if this is not a valid answer, they accept that we cannot know already the answer, and that some of the questions could never be answered.
      This is the intelligent attitude.
      On the other hand fear is not a good adviser ,and linked negatively with intelligence.

    • @sliskekeeling
      @sliskekeeling 6 лет назад +3

      What makes you think they dont answer the questions? A very important aspect of it is that they answer the questions, each in their own way. How well you decipher the message and hiw you apply it in other areas, says much about you yourself

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray 5 лет назад +30

      Sliske Project
      You are referring to fabricated answers not empirical real answers.

    • @wayneconner2394
      @wayneconner2394 5 лет назад +42

      Sliske Project God isn't an answer, it's a claim to knowledge that so far every religion has failed to demonstrate with actual evidence. Human beings claiming to speak for and write books for mysterious all-powerful hidden deities is not evidence either.

  • @miguelleonelgranadospeguer2371
    @miguelleonelgranadospeguer2371 4 года назад +13

    She truly found her vocation, irradiates passion for what she does.

  • @shenidan2023
    @shenidan2023 Год назад

    A Ten years old post but absolutely fascinating. Both presenter and subject matter. These are great questions and discussions.

  • @ATLANTECHFLOWMETERS
    @ATLANTECHFLOWMETERS Год назад +27

    She made it sound all so simple and easy to understand.

    • @alvaroq2024
      @alvaroq2024 Год назад +3

      Not for me. I’m gonna have to watch it several times to appreciate it.

  • @NickRoman
    @NickRoman 6 лет назад +76

    This is so fascinating that we can learn so much about early humans, that our real history, though unwritten, is so ancient and to consider what this tells us about how we think and what it means to be human... and so disappointing that a large majority of humanity because their religion just says 'nope' just denies that any of this is real, that we have any connection to these people. They refuse to know how humans actually developed into what we are because they think it conflicts with their precious story, ignoring of course that every culture that came before them did the same thing.

    • @potaxe8048
      @potaxe8048 Год назад +6

      “…ignoring of course that every culture that came before them did the same thing.” And, still, they survived. That’s the difference: the ignorance today is killing us.

    • @greenthumb8266
      @greenthumb8266 Год назад

      Sadly the religiously indoctrinated people are counting on their god to come clean up their mess and reward them with a brand new Earth, ignorance is bliss and it lets them off the hook where personal responsibility is concerned.

    • @ajstutz69
      @ajstutz69 Год назад +2

      I grew up under the reign of young earth creationists. I still don’t know how they explain all of this. They’ve never been able to answer ANY of my questions.

    • @greenthumb8266
      @greenthumb8266 Год назад

      @@ajstutz69 I believe there is a Creator (capital C) although I lean towards a more scientific approach along with, of course, personal experience. But I know this much for certain, I would never serve the god, that ego-filled (only our church is going to heaven) greedy (several mansions, private jets, expensive jewelry) religions are offering up these days. But boy can they drag them in, all ready to open their pocketbooks, for a chance at salvation, sad really. And they’re, most of them, too busy keeping up appearances to do ANY real Christ-like work.

    • @peterbartley7183
      @peterbartley7183 Год назад +2

      @@greenthumb8266as soon as you say “ I believe in a creator “ but have no evidence you are exactly opposite of a scientific approach. If you were thinking scientifically you would at least say “ I don’t know “

  • @cseeger1
    @cseeger1 8 лет назад +39

    She touched on it briefly, but I would like to hear an in depth talk about the role of the Shaman, how it began, how it evolved, and it's importance and contribution to the development of mankind. I've given some thought the topic and the more I explore it the more fascinating it becomes.

    • @ozdigg9254
      @ozdigg9254 8 лет назад +1

      +cseeger1 If you google the foundation for shamanic studies there is much information to be had. :)

    • @TheRobdarling
      @TheRobdarling 7 лет назад +4

      cseeger1 Joseph Campbell did some great work on this. check out his Masks of God. I think it's covered in the volume called Primitive Mythology. Or maybe Creative Mythology.

    • @Getz-Da-Chompy
      @Getz-Da-Chompy 6 лет назад +6

      I would recommend you seek out what Carl Jung had to say - he is the guy who came up with the theory of the collective unconscious, and one of the figures he identified as being a cultural keystone is that of a shaman. I haven't read all of his works, but I'd imagine he'd cover a lot about the past meanings of shamanistic figures and how that influences us today

    • @r.bevantrembly3687
      @r.bevantrembly3687 4 года назад

      cseeger1 She forgot to mention “Bear Doctors”, shaman who could kill or make your enemies sick!

    • @unnanointedonesufi
      @unnanointedonesufi 3 года назад +1

      Look up Terrance mckenna

  • @leelyttle7599
    @leelyttle7599 Год назад +5

    I think it's possible we may still carry the memory of our ancestors and this comes out in the trance like benefits from a meditative practice. We still carry a need for survival through symbols and imagery. Much like they did. Love this stuff

  • @danielbuckner2167
    @danielbuckner2167 2 года назад +11

    Soooo into Genevieve! Some of that rock art is surprisingly similar to some I saw in my cave archaeology field school and research in Central America. I have seen much on three continents and countless caves and been the first to shine light on some. I'd love to go caving and cave mapping a site with her!

    • @petergianarakos4439
      @petergianarakos4439 Год назад +1

      that cave art suspiciously looks similar to the cave I live in...hmmm

    • @wecanonlywish9194
      @wecanonlywish9194 Год назад

      @@petergianarakos4439 Or...the one she lives in?

  • @perryweeks4857
    @perryweeks4857 5 лет назад +70

    Boy she's careful. And good at it. Otherwise she would not get so many to listen. She knows a lot more than what's said.

    • @dennisruigrok6831
      @dennisruigrok6831 2 года назад

      She cannot prove there was no religion. Only thing she knows is that both statements are false and that nobody is having a valid discussion.

    • @nnaammuuss
      @nnaammuuss 2 года назад +2

      @@dennisruigrok6831 ??

    • @anamaakotube
      @anamaakotube 2 года назад +1

      In other words she was politically correct. And we didn't get the benefit of her knowledge. And that's a good thing. Ignorance is bliss. Your description is correct, but I hate that reality. You're killing me Perry lol.....😜

    • @Pados_music
      @Pados_music 2 года назад +2

      @@scottharrison8701 I'm not sure the eternal wars between the sunis and the shiites in the islamic world are all for economics reasons.

    • @Pados_music
      @Pados_music 2 года назад

      @@scottharrison8701 What? a pointless comment.

  • @saucegotti9416
    @saucegotti9416 4 года назад +3

    I think us people can’t comprehend that we control our own future and want/need a higher power to look to for questions and answers

  • @AndrewKendall71
    @AndrewKendall71 4 года назад +2

    One of the difficulties - on display in this talk - is the difficulty imagining the things proposed without doing so from a contemporary thinking perspective. And this is interesting, since Von Petzinger pointed out herself that the brain and frame aren't enough to define that they were "us." Capacity to be us leaves out a colossal amount of visual language, group experiences, developed traditions, presuppositions, etc., which are so much the air we currently breathe, it's impossible to leave behind the imprinted biases. So it's exceedingly difficult to sort of "see with their eyes" regarding what their symbols and practices mean. But this is a very interesting talk on some of what the paleo-anthropologist has done toward that difficult work.

  • @rdianelovelady5129
    @rdianelovelady5129 Год назад

    Awesome talk! Congratulations!

  • @zedwms
    @zedwms 5 лет назад +4

    18:00 Zentangle makes use of this type of Trance Imagery in the form of meditation through drawing. It's validating to see that this is a deep part of human history/psyche.

  • @greglaroche1753
    @greglaroche1753 7 лет назад +8

    Great and interesting presentation. I wait for more from you.

    • @DW_Kiwi
      @DW_Kiwi Год назад

      Yeah. Live in Hope in the meantime

  • @Mike-nt9sx
    @Mike-nt9sx Год назад +5

    I have seen every talk she's given and read every book she's written. She never fails to make me completely present to life's mysteries.

    • @tfpnation6925
      @tfpnation6925 Год назад +1

      What you have said here is not profound, what has she done with respect to your understanding of life’s mysteries.
      Has she made you change your views ?

    • @Mike-nt9sx
      @Mike-nt9sx Год назад

      @@tfpnation6925 heck yeah! Our History is way longer than the one we moderns know of..

  • @Ryan-vj6jn
    @Ryan-vj6jn 2 года назад +4

    This was wonderful. Thank you.

  • @Crazy_Diamond_75
    @Crazy_Diamond_75 6 лет назад +139

    Seems almost every comment is about how "religion is evil" and nothing on the actual text of the video. I for one, thought this was a fascinating and engaging talk about our modern origins and how early ideas and practices coalesced, through both evolution and tradition, into something more complicated and spiritual. Someone else mentioned this, but I, too, would like to hear more about the "evolution" of the Shaman, and how that societal role shifted over the course of our early history. Really fascinating stuff.

    • @seaotter52
      @seaotter52 5 лет назад +7

      @Largesse1000
      And you missed that he was talking about the comments. By trying to slam TED ( interesting that science is called liberal by so many like yourself), a response to you could be " you're dealing with conservative smugness, condescension, narrow mindedness, arrogance, ignorance mixed with a lack of comprehension, so what do you expect. Not pleasant was it. As for accuracy, I don't know you but doubt it. The overview provided by the researcher was interesting and thought provoking. The intersection of archeology and neuroscience is helping understand the past and the present.

    • @jeffhodge7333
      @jeffhodge7333 4 года назад +8

      I do not find irrational thought amazing. This gal talks as if irrational thought is something to admire as progress. Trust me; religion and other dogmas have set back the human race.

    • @NabPunk
      @NabPunk 4 года назад +7

      @@jeffhodge7333 I agree with the last part of your statement, but it is simply how we have evolved, and it would take more than persuasion to change people's minds, Heartless pushing of our ideas onto another would make us non-believers no different from those that came before us.

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth 4 года назад +1

      --'Rivers of Life: Sources and Streams of Faith of man in All Lands' James Forlong

    • @pbohearn
      @pbohearn 4 года назад +4

      Shameless Papist hmm plenty of religions used human sacrifice. But perhaps we evolved from that to using war instead

  • @RafaelSantos-xl1ut
    @RafaelSantos-xl1ut 5 лет назад +7

    VERY ENLIGHTENING!!!

  • @thetruthaboutscienceandgod6921
    @thetruthaboutscienceandgod6921 2 года назад +1

    Please share this brief video with others: Atheists and Agnostics Need This

  • @adrianmonk4440
    @adrianmonk4440 Год назад

    My friend and I have had lengthy discussions & debates on Evolution:
    * Descending from the treetops.
    * Standing erect to view the Serengeti, etc.
    * Large roaming to find more & newer food sources & water.
    * FINALLY MOVEMENT TO EUROPE WHICH REQUIRED COMPLETE CLOTHING, MORE TOOLS, & MORE ELABORATE LANGUAGE & SOCIAL ORGANIZATION FOR SURVIVAL.

  • @416dl
    @416dl 6 лет назад +17

    very interesting, as TED talks go, and in keeping with her other talk on her research regarding the symbols found on cave walls primarily in Europe. It's been 5 years and I am aware that Dr.Von Pettinger's research continues and it seems like news discoveries and understandings are revealed daily, and would love to know how our she sees the state of knowledge now. Cheers.

  • @ambujamramiah7142
    @ambujamramiah7142 4 года назад +7

    They began to saw those things in awe and wonder and thus the thought of a power which is beyond their control and worship of those things began.

    • @casteretpollux
      @casteretpollux 2 года назад

      Absolutely no evidence for that. Its guesswork.

    • @mayflowerlash11
      @mayflowerlash11 2 года назад

      I agree with Ambujam. The evidence is in the tools and drawings and grave goods.

  • @AbreTuMente
    @AbreTuMente 3 года назад +2

    Thanks for sharing this very interesting information!

  • @teamhaselmyer
    @teamhaselmyer 4 года назад +90

    Fascinating
    The cave paintings in France could be the first how to hunting PowerPoint presentation!!!

    • @MrDuane-lr8dm
      @MrDuane-lr8dm 3 года назад +2

      Exactly. That bison with the spears was a "aim for this spot" diagram.

    • @zapkvr
      @zapkvr 3 года назад

      Love it. I read about the caves in elementary school in the 60s

    • @clavo3352
      @clavo3352 2 года назад

      See the word "point". See the pointed spear. 1=1.

    • @willy-johndejager6810
      @willy-johndejager6810 2 года назад

      and slightly less tedious than windows10. haha. but yea very cool point. i imagine asterix seeing his ancestors work.

    • @lewsouth1539
      @lewsouth1539 2 года назад

      Hmm... could be, if not for the fact that they were never a PowerPoint presentation. I'm also taking points off for your failure to hyphenate "how-to" (making it a bit harder for autists like me to parse your comment).

  • @mayms9181
    @mayms9181 2 года назад +23

    All religions are made in earth.
    ‏I left Islam when I read the Qur’an and the biography of Muhammad, the Prophet of Islam
    ‏Now I live in Iraq and I can't talk about it even with my family I might be killed, and society will reject me, it's very difficult for me
    ‏and many Arabs leave Islam every day, but they cannot announce that because they may be killed and of course society rejects them.

    • @uthoshantm
      @uthoshantm 2 года назад +1

      I happen to live is Saudi Arabia and nobody gets killed for being an atheist. Atheists certainly meet disapproval, but hey, everyone is free to think what he wants.

    • @theseed2199
      @theseed2199 2 года назад +2

      Even though I'm a Muslim, I can quite relate. I didn't believe in Islam for a while, but then came back.
      But the sort of anxiety and dear of being an apostate certainly did trouble me. I hope you find peace, in whatever it may be.

    • @davidramirez4535
      @davidramirez4535 2 года назад +5

      Because all religions fear the truth..

    • @maimee5810
      @maimee5810 2 года назад +1

      Dr rashad khalifa messenger of the covenant cleared all my misconceptions about islam and world religions.I only submit to god no idols like Muhammad jesus or any prophet

    • @user-ry2qs7xf9k
      @user-ry2qs7xf9k 2 года назад +1

      @@davidramirez4535 Truth??

  • @geoffunwin196
    @geoffunwin196 Год назад +3

    wonderful clarity of informed reasoning - religion is the blight of the present world.

  • @zapkvr
    @zapkvr 3 года назад +1

    Fascinating. Thank you

  • @figga222
    @figga222 4 года назад +64

    "Is it all in the lobes?"
    _The Ferengi Alliance has entered the chat_

    • @peytonquinn3095
      @peytonquinn3095 4 года назад +2

      Great show: "Exploration begins at home' "even if it is free you can find a better price' Just two of the Ruies of Acquisition. The sacred text of the Deferring.

    • @willrawls5899
      @willrawls5899 3 года назад

      Nooooo....... not the Rules of Acquisition!!!!! Lol

    • @casteretpollux
      @casteretpollux 2 года назад +1

      It has taken my dog 12 years to learn how to ask me for water. It took her ten years to learn how to ask me for lunch at 12 o'clock. She has recently learned how to ask me to brush her. My conclusion is that in recent years I've been listening to her better. The hearing and listening is a social engagement is between the two of us. I find the assumptions made in these talks, by archaeologists and neurologists, are mostly crass speculations based on their very limited grasp of human society and culture. Plus the term 'symbolic' seems to be misused. A necklace is not symbolic. It's decorative. A set of beads might denote status or might be felt to be lucky. Neither of those functions is a symbol. A symbol is a stand-in mark or artefact that stands in for something else.

    • @mayflowerlash11
      @mayflowerlash11 2 года назад

      LOL

  • @DearProfessorRF
    @DearProfessorRF 5 лет назад +33

    "The great Russian author Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910) said: 'The religion of those who do not recognize religion is to follow everything the powerful majority does. Simply put, it is the religion of submission to those currently in power.'
    "Unless people possess firm conviction in their hearts - unless they can honestly say to themselves, "I will never compromise on this point" and, "I will stake my life on defending this ideal" - they will be swayed, unable to resist the pressures of the majority. And of course it will then be even more difficult for them to endure persecution at the hands of the authorities.
    Ultimately, such people, in everything they do, will follow the powerful majority. They will have a wait-and-see attitude and take whatever action is expedient at the moment. With the hollow of justification that "there's no other way," they will time and again capitulate to those in power."
    -Daisaku Ikeda

    • @DearProfessorRF
      @DearProfessorRF 4 года назад +4

      @@markdavis7397 Technically speaking I am an atheist since in Buddhism there is no concept of an all-creator God (I've been practicing Buddhism for a good while). I think Tolstoy, in the above quote, was refering to those who think religions make people have blind faith, when this is also the case of those who base their understanding of all life phenomena in purely scientific terms. Think of those who believed, and stil do, in Eugenics or racial superiority, supposedly based on data. I don't know much about Zoroaster but Buddha means "enlightened one." Mark Davis has the Buddha nature. Muhammad means "praiseworthy," and I am sure you are Muhammad in many ways. Also, Tostoy is sending a warning, not to those who don't believe in religion, but to those who don't recognize its importance, speceially its positive contributions in human societies.

    • @NabPunk
      @NabPunk 4 года назад +5

      @@DearProfessorRF My friend, religion for a Buddhist like yourself has a very different meaning, as there is no concept of God, you concentrate on making yourself better humans instead of better boot lickers. However, the other religions hardly care about self realization, they care about fitting everyone into a single cast (I mean to kind you use to shape iron or plastic, also called mould) and eliminating other casts.

    • @MybridWonderful
      @MybridWonderful 4 года назад +1

      "Claims asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence." - Christopher Hitchens, Hitchens Razor.
      Because somebody says something you believe it? This is a science talk and you're asserting BS.

  • @williamhall6358
    @williamhall6358 2 года назад +13

    Thought inspiring vid. Would be super interesting to know at what point in our history (modern human) we started recognizing and actively using psychedelic plants … I would assume also that biochem receptors for same evolved to be part of our biochemical make up. Could be there is a correlation between the “impossible entities” and the types of edible plants we were exposed to whilst having the receptors biochemically established.

    • @elliot7205
      @elliot7205 2 года назад

      How did we come up with thinking of these entities?

    • @hippopotamus6765
      @hippopotamus6765 Год назад

      Great thought, were they rolling joints 25,000 yrs ago?

  • @TheGnewb
    @TheGnewb 2 года назад +1

    Excellent, thank you for being.

  • @FZMello
    @FZMello Год назад

    The desire for comfort in the face of impending (or eventual) death is exactly as old as mankind's ability to envision the unseen. The promise of immortality ubiquitously wielded by religion naturally sprang from that desire for comfort. I suspect burial started as a simple way to protect a loved one's remains from being feasted upon by scavengers. From there, it's a relatively short jump as seeing the underground as the "transfer point" between life and death, and therefore, a "membrane" between worlds seen and unseen. All in all, a very good TED talk.

  • @gusmore26
    @gusmore26 Год назад +14

    "I once took a radio apart and discovered that there are no talk show hosts, their guests, nor callers-in, it's just that the radio is wired to make it seem as if they exist." - Gus More

    • @bradzimmerman3171
      @bradzimmerman3171 Год назад +1

      Gus More is real! Christian god IS NOT I don't CARE and you shouldn't either however the bible is comical at least but shouldn't be taken seriously

    • @user-mz1kt6iz4e
      @user-mz1kt6iz4e Год назад +1

      That's great..!(laughing out loud as I say that to myself) He makes a statement, then gives himself a citation for the quote. As if we'll think, "Oooo, Gus More said that. Well, then it must be good!" Except that, despite the fact that the people he lists off are not to be found inside the radio, itself, there is evidence that they are out there somewhere. And if Gus is bright enough to actually understand the workings of this thing he's just torn apart, he will see how that is true. Where is the parallel to that in his religion?

    • @christopherp.hitchens3902
      @christopherp.hitchens3902 Год назад +1

      ...And if you stew cranberries, they taste like applesauce. Your turn.

    • @arturama8581
      @arturama8581 Год назад

      'They' don't *seem* to exist, they DO exist. Just not inside the radio.

    • @gusmore26
      @gusmore26 Год назад +1

      @@arturama8581 Art, my philosophical joke about taking apart a radio has nothing to do with claiming that God exists; rather, it has to do with exposing the fundamental flaw in Genevieve's logical argument. The author of "The God Part of the Brain" makes the same mistake at logic.

  • @jaimeariasfarias6520
    @jaimeariasfarias6520 Год назад +5

    Hello Genvieve,
    Thanks for a very interesting presentation. When I just started working as a freshman geologist professional in Chile in 1972, found a fascinating book, which is still in my bookshelf. Its authors were a husband and wife geologists couple - Mr. and Mrs. Jean Termier, printed in 1971 - who had studied stone tools from France's territory, quoting they had found some 760 different rock types used to make tools found in archeological sites.
    Interestingly, the Termier's finding points towards a large variety of rocks logically to be found within a wide geographic region with a varied geological evolution and many rocks types formation, but it also points to the human tool-making actually experimenting with many rock types in the search for the more adequate materials for tools applications intended to be made for. So this widespread experimenting in search of the "best suited rock types materials" in my view reveals that there was "an intelligent learning process" (intelligence being defined in this case as "acquiring concepts and being able to link them into ideas", that is learning about those diverse rock materials through its empyrical experimental testing.
    The particular Termier couple finding of numerous rock types used to make tools from an extensive geographic archeological of French territory search, led me as a geologist and minerals exploration/metallogeny researcher, to think those tools were derived both from a diverse and varied abundance of rock types, each with particular rock crushing strength, shear breaking strength and tension strength.
    Incidentally, the crushing strength of granite - a typical crustal rock - is about 1,500 kg./cm2, its shearing strength being 150 kg./cm2 (i. e., 1/10 = 10%) and its tension strength 50 to 30 kg./cm2 (i. e., 1/30 = 3.3% only); these "rock properties imply that the tool-making energy needed" defined the minimum amount of energy delivery needed and the "human prensile-hand" positioning enabling use of the optimum muscle force to obtain "the useful rock materials shaping with the minimum energy use", while learning about allowing for the preservation of the "fragile muscle-tendon and bone" condition free of injuries while cracking rocks and shaping them into essential survival tools. Interestingly, archeology researchers in the Kalahari Desert of Western Africa, found blocks of obsidian - a volcanic rock glass - which were clearly chipped by large rock-block tools that provided very sharp edges tools; further search in the area found these obsidian rocks were privileged by end- users who transported it for n x 10 kilometers to other human settlements favouring this material to make flesh- and hide-cutting tools.
    Rocks are defined as "mineral aggregates" and the are at least 3,800 different mineral species, dominated by silicate rocks (equivalent to about 67% of the Earth's Crust mass - which are made of the hardest common base mineral Quartz (SiO2; 7 in Mohs empirical hardness scale) associated mainly with elements such as Ca, Na, K, Al into similarly hard silicate structures (Mohs's 5.0 to 6.5) - which make most of the Earth's Crust; interestingly, Quartz or high SiO2 content rocks (Chalcedony and silicified rocks which are SiO2 replaced rocks) were dominant in the "arrow factory" I found on a hills range overlooking the desert.
    This "arrow factory" site overlooked from a hill-top into a minute desert spring where animals would drink and eat grass; also found more crudely shaped stone tools such as bone-crushing hammers, animal meat-cutting and hide cleaning artifacts elsewhere, mixed with fired clay containers, etc., while carrying out minerals exploration in other sites of the Atacama Desert.
    One can conclude therefore, that the "intelligent human indirectly experimenting with rock properties is the base of all human empirical and technical development", since rock usage as tools led to the discovery and later obtaining of metals by smelting of ores, a process which incidentally has led to the emission of about 40% of CO2 worldwide in 2022 from the primitively sustained obtaining of metals by smelting; which replacement by clean processes has been in part my research since 1984, arriving in 2018 at a hydrometallurgical industrial process that needs less than 5% of its current energy consumption.
    Jaime ARIAS, Geologist (1972); Ph. D. Applied Geochemistry (1978)
    Santiago, Chile. Cell phone and Whatsapp: 56-9-65160705

  • @tashuntka
    @tashuntka Год назад

    She's awesome.....
    Smart, easy to listen to that voice....💛
    Will watch again 👍😶‍🌫️👍

  • @raceryod
    @raceryod 4 года назад

    Thank you very much .
    Her efforts are well appreciated.
    Where do we come from , the existential question .

    • @mayflowerlash11
      @mayflowerlash11 2 года назад

      We evolved from bacteria 3billion years ago. The bacteria came from inanimate matter as a consequence of the laws of physics.

  • @gregmckenzie4315
    @gregmckenzie4315 Год назад +15

    I tend to think that our brains evolved the frontal cortex as a tool for organizing our local social units and communities to improve our lives and ensure our ability to thrive. I suspect that our language abilities served this purpose, primarily by allowing us to communicate in metaphors. With our improved brains we could remember the names of our neighbors and families and the entire structure of the community could be described with our metaphorical language.
    I can’t help but see a metaphorical language as a tool for social control. I’m sure it was immediately adopted by the most ambitious individuals as a means for controlling the general population. The “magic words” were used to construct a world-view (religion) that set boundaries and that secured the position of powerful individuals.
    I would like to see more discussion about these ideas. In order to survive this extinction event we need to reform or “re-form” our religious ideas in a metaphorical language that comports more closely with reality than our current language does. We do not have a lot of time.

    • @riandraegon556
      @riandraegon556 Год назад +1

      Can I get an Amen!!

    • @gusmore26
      @gusmore26 Год назад

      Nicely put, Greg. That sounds like a very good and probable thesis for directing academic studies on frontal cortex evolution.

    • @gregmckenzie4315
      @gregmckenzie4315 Год назад +1

      @@gusmore26 Thanks. Unfortunately this is a difficult subject to "talk about" because our language is designed to obscure the entire subject.

    • @gusmore26
      @gusmore26 Год назад +1

      I heard on some documentary or other that we pushed the Neanderthals to extinction because we were able to establish regional trade with others of our species and shared ideas and plans for the future, while Neanderthals stayed within their own little family groups and lived more in the moment. As for using Religion to control the masses, I think that came much later. In our earlier prehistoric times, people were a lot more emotionally driven and may not have been able to tell quite where the boundary between dreaming and reality was (i.e. the difference between the mental plane and the material plan). I believe, religion was used to explain those things that happen beyond 3 Standard Deviations of the usual experiences, and bridge the logic gap between the perception domains of Emotion (a.k.a. spirituality), Mind (a.k.a. Reason, Logos or Logic), and Matter.

  • @captainnemo2150
    @captainnemo2150 4 года назад +9

    I think it was a way to try to explain what humans could not comprehend .

  • @julez1260
    @julez1260 Год назад

    Seeking to understand what it means to be truly virtuous, is what the world needs more of.

  • @platovsky
    @platovsky 2 года назад

    Increíble presentación la profesora Genieve es sencilla mente Genial 🌏

  • @TheLRider
    @TheLRider Год назад +4

    Absolutely loved that talk.. Huge references to other worlds in ancient Celtic/ Welsh mythology and the transition from one to the other by "Shamens". Each other world had Gods. These myths certainly were "alive and well" in the bronze age. Possibly the Shamens of the time were the ones who possessed specialist skills of being able to smelt Copper Ore etc. The world of the dead was called Annwn.. I talk of this only because it's my cultural heritage. Others will have theirs. An observation is that reverence for a buried person is borne out of having a huge emotional loss due to a death. That denotes pretty advanced thought processes to register that loss.

  • @garyha2650
    @garyha2650 4 года назад +6

    So much we don't know, so satisfying to take a guess

  • @allwheeldrive
    @allwheeldrive Год назад +1

    It's important to frame this problem as "organized" religion. The basic drivers for all religions, in the most general sense, are all based on fear, ignorance, and hope. Even our most distant modern human ancestors were trying to make sense of what they experienced, and had to ascribe it to something they can't see, hear, feel, or touch as they reacted to weather, the day/night sky, untimely deaths through illness and attacks, etc., etc. When this all took a turn is when some of those first humans (those darned shamans) realized they could quite effectively personally benefit from the control of other humans with fear and hope by coopting and framing these early belief systems. And over thousands of years, passing along an increasing awareness also passed along the increasing anxiety of learning more and understanding less, and this very human need to create a familiar, human-centric, organized structure that could relieve them of having to figure out the impossible. This will never change.

  • @jeffreyk9743
    @jeffreyk9743 Год назад

    I so love Ted Talk
    I always learn so much life changing information

  • @karanseraph
    @karanseraph 3 года назад +10

    Commenting from 2020 when we've had a pandemic; when people can't go outside (like there's ice or plague) they can't find enough things to do and start baking, crafting, etc. Not surprised cave shelters have a lot of art or that people had time to make beads and jewelry.

  • @mpaczkow
    @mpaczkow 3 года назад +3

    Actually, I like the concept of thinking about religion as a “tool” since it is how religion is used. Some religions are sophisticated, some are not. Some organized religions take the basic “tool” and make it into something that is either constructive or destructive. There are a lot of parallels to how we view hobbies, companies, etc.

    • @pergamonrecordings
      @pergamonrecordings 3 года назад +1

      Seems to me that you are projecting hindsight views back in time (i.e. religion is used as a tool, so tools are the start of religion)..I think that the idea, here, is that the ability to think of oneself from the perspective of the outside (self consciousness) opens up the possibility of a "Big Other" (God) and that the process of making a tool requires planning, imagination, the ability to think forward in time etc. which all imply degrees of self consciousness. That would mean that the evolution of learning to make tools might inspire the possibility of a "Big Other", not that religion IS a tool at that point (though in complex societies that might be said to be true of course)

  • @hashimeid8892
    @hashimeid8892 2 года назад

    I like how some people give you an insight about certain topics and leave it to you to think ,,,,

  • @raymondgarlick4624
    @raymondgarlick4624 Год назад +1

    Finding healed broken bones in early humans demonstrates the point that humanity truly became us. Caring for others

  • @PapaOsmubal.OscarBalajadia
    @PapaOsmubal.OscarBalajadia Год назад +3

    It is quite fascinating how boring topics are made interesting and amusing by such great individuals like this lady. Thanks.

  • @jrey6186
    @jrey6186 Год назад +8

    Concise presentation, many thanks

  • @mikethestoner
    @mikethestoner 3 года назад

    Great talk thanks very much.

  • @tristanwilliams6002
    @tristanwilliams6002 Год назад

    Thank you!

  • @WORKERS.DREADNOUGHT
    @WORKERS.DREADNOUGHT 7 лет назад +12

    How does a mimic octopus mimic items? Does it also have a template in its mind in order to do so?

    • @freakshit22
      @freakshit22 2 года назад

      it will have visuomotor neuronal wirings which makes them to mimic what they see i guess.

  • @johnbell6114
    @johnbell6114 2 года назад +7

    There's a couple caves in France with wonderful early human artwork, extremely interesting. Mainly hunting images, but also human and possible religious images. There's one of a poor guy getting killed, but I think there's also afterlife depictions. They're called Cosquer and Chauvet Caves, I believe. I'm sure there's more all over the world. The drawings have been dated, with a center at 31,000 years ago, some older and others newer.
    Many animal depictions, mostly extinct, but some of horses and lions.

    • @granthurlburt4062
      @granthurlburt4062 Год назад +1

      Actually, only one single image could possibly be considered a hunting image. The others are all of animals (mostly mammals), three shamans in total, a few fish, and geometric symbols. The one weird one has a bison on its side with possibly intestines or an after birth spilling out, a stick-human figure, and a stick with a bird on top of it. I guess that it what you're referring to. None of them show an afterlife. There are images of hunting on large AFrican rocks, that are much younger than the European ones.

    • @clarkpalace
      @clarkpalace Год назад

      Read the Clan of the Cave Bear series by Jean Auel. She brings those cave paintings to life!

  • @johnventura1637
    @johnventura1637 Год назад +1

    What may be most fascinating is how we have taken this early desire to understand our world and ourselves (the early intimations of religion she spoke of) to the level of religious fundamentalism and violence that we see today.

    • @tomward2688
      @tomward2688 Год назад

      Yep, religion by rights should be officially described as a form of mental illness. I suspect the reason it isn't is likely down to the fact that it manages to make millions in returns for a politically powerful bunch of lobbyists, especially in the US.

  • @xanasantos1
    @xanasantos1 7 месяцев назад

    I read a hugely influential book when I was at University written by Steven Mithen “The pre history of the mind”. I wonder if Genevieve also came across it?
    Anyone interested here is such a detailed food for thought on the matter of the pre historical human mind’s formation.

  • @pryaz1
    @pryaz1 4 года назад +45

    This was great, thanks to Genevive. The only problem was when she points out about "mental time travel" and claims "human can remember things like using [certain] material for [certain] tool didn't work, so I shouldn't use it. This is only a human behavior and animals don't do that". This is false since we know Ravens watch each other when one is using a tool, or tries to reach to food in a certain way, and if that member fails, next one tries another way or tool with another shape or material.

    • @Gericho49
      @Gericho49 4 года назад +5

      Attacking religion to justify Atheism is totally illogical. Atheism aka *Naturalism, is a bankrupt worldview*
      Ask any closeminded sceptic to explain 1) how anything exists now, if all time, space and matter began in the finite past. The finitude of past [time] proves absolutely nothing once existed, and so mstter/energy must have a cause outside time, space and matter. 2) the origin and existence of the *immaterial, immutable laws of science* and similarly what they are grounded in i. e. Abstract Logic and mathematics. In their naturalist worldview, mindless matter is the only game in town. Naturalism as a worldview is totally bankrupt when it comes to explaining what truly defines human nature, I. e. metaphysical truths like beauty, meaning, truth, wisdom, justice, morality, joy, love, hope, destiny and not least, the rational intelligibility of our awe-inspiring universe. Only within theism do we have the necessary intellectual framework to explain what cannot be isolated in a test tube. Such axioms define the human spirit, from which we get meaning hope and destiny.
      Creating a strawman out of religion to justify Atheism is about as logical as using flawed atomic orbital theories to deny sub atomic particles. Or perhaps, a mistaken UFO sighting to justify a belief in non existence of aliens.

    • @stupidtreehugger
      @stupidtreehugger 4 года назад +4

      @@Gericho49 , "Naturalism as a worldview is totally bankrupt when it comes to explaining what truly defines human nature" says the person fully using naturalism for all it's worth, and who doesn't even know how to use paragraphs. Hiding in his intellectualism from reality. Africa has 5x as many (barely subsisting and starving) people as it had 7 decades ago. And they care no more about your theism than a virus

    • @stupidtreehugger
      @stupidtreehugger 4 года назад +1

      "Only within theism do we have the necessary intellectual framework to explain what cannot be isolated in a test tube". I agree. Sheep need a shepherd, even if, or especially if, an illusory one.

    • @Druuna55
      @Druuna55 4 года назад +6

      @@Gericho49 you are so triggered, calm down, just pick yourself a religion, doesn't matter which, no one actually cares lol

    • @rosemaryjane7110
      @rosemaryjane7110 4 года назад +1

      She doesn't say they don't use tools. She says they don't modify them

  • @erl7466
    @erl7466 7 лет назад +6

    very excellent, well spoken tutorial about a great many things. thanks for sharing!

  • @Dechieftian
    @Dechieftian Год назад +1

    wow! amazing stuff. Thought provoking at the very least. Insightful and believeable as we look back at our human ancestry. Seems instinctely right! Thanks Genevieve!

  • @satyajitverma2158
    @satyajitverma2158 3 года назад

    First (budding) scholar I heard who clearly admits her data and conclusions are Eurocentric and she is not imposing her conclusions on the Eastern world. Bravo.

    • @casteretpollux
      @casteretpollux 2 года назад

      And assumes that evrrything started AFTER we left Africa.

  • @klowen7778
    @klowen7778 Год назад +33

    Fascinating TED Talk... thank you! BTW, it's also been suggested that the 'invention' of religion is what first enabled humans to imagine larger group identities and hierarchies, beyond just local clans and traditional tribal affiliations.

    • @TheBerserker50
      @TheBerserker50 Год назад

      hardly.

    • @stultusvenator3233
      @stultusvenator3233 Год назад +1

      It was a form of tribalism that already existed it just used it and could then exclude more people or other them even if from the same group.
      The evolution from Sharman or Healer to a priesthood of parasites included their attachment to the ruling class in return the "Devine right to rule" was developed.

    • @cliftongaither6642
      @cliftongaither6642 Год назад

      @@TheBerserker50 how so?

    • @klowen7778
      @klowen7778 Год назад

      @@toph10167 Oh, 'fer sure things inevitably reverted to that, but in the meantime it also grew more complex social relationships and alliances, city-states, empires... which often comes with an evolutionary advantage. And that we arguably enjoy and take for granted even today.

  • @reddymorgan
    @reddymorgan 4 года назад +3

    Its good that when we look at something, we could all have different views. And if you believe in something, how it can transform into your belief system

  • @priscillaquin3036
    @priscillaquin3036 2 года назад

    Wow Sharman is very true in my experience. Thank you

  • @kentkarlsson8277
    @kentkarlsson8277 Год назад

    Great talk !

  • @FlatlandMando
    @FlatlandMando Год назад +4

    I'm ready for chapters 2,&3&4 of her talks. I want to hear the theorizations of how the priestly class tied in directly with the political class to create & support wars and to connect the dots & zig zags that result in the horrible criminality of a body of earthly HUMANS to put to death another human for supposed crimes against God or Allah or whatever iteration of religious dogma you choose. Now there's a couple of juicy talk topics!

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Год назад +1

      You seem to be conflating what she is talking about with the prejudices of the philosophes and the ideologies they developed to substitute for Christianity in particular.

  • @AnnemieM
    @AnnemieM 6 лет назад +12

    I did like this video and I thank Ted talks and Genevieve Von Petzinger for this fine talk.
    What I am hoping to learn some day is how some cruel inhuman practices such as male and fem. circumcision, self mutilation, blood rituals, witch hunting, blood sacrifices and other horrors imposed on the people ever took hold on a large group of people and have been practiced over centuries.

    • @jenster29
      @jenster29 4 года назад +5

      They were thought up by psychos who were in charge or at least had a lot of influence on people.
      Most religions today started off as, what we would call a cult, nowadays. They manipulated people through their ignorance and fear. People will go along with anything once an authority figure instructs them too.

  • @Gk2003m
    @Gk2003m 3 года назад

    0:30: First point: no one fights about spirituality. It does not occur. Spiritual experience does not lead to conflict. What leads to conflict is power/control. Which tells you instantly that organized religion is the polar opposite of actual spirituality.

  • @IainDavie
    @IainDavie 3 года назад +1

    "For in ancient times the universe and all things were considered circular. Then in time by Imperial decree a square was drawn inside the circle, placing a limitation on what others outside of the elite were to be allowed to know, as if the rose to a table of authorised knowledge." - Chapter 4 - Moneydie

  • @alvarocervantescamacho1979
    @alvarocervantescamacho1979 2 года назад +20

    Enjoyed this video, very good information; you are an expert Genevieve. This is what I think about this subject: Our curiosity, the lack of understanding, and the need to satisfy our curiosity can make us lie to ourselves (e.g. invent a response). Our ancestors didn't have enough information to satisfy their curiosity for any natural phenomena. Neither they could come up with a good explanation of the origin of humans or other natural organisms, once they started thinking about the very far past. The need to understand where we came from or how, is probably the origin of the monotheistic religions, as religion moved away from natural phenomena Gods. I am not an expert, but I noticed my father and mother how many lies they told us when we were kids, all because they didn't know an answer to our curious questions about this world; they just to say something like "God made it," and under this pandemic, they still say the same thing, "God will get rid of it."

    • @DW_Kiwi
      @DW_Kiwi Год назад

      Your mother and father are partly right "God made it" ...Nature. However, he didn't make the pandemic...man did. Left alone Man will ultimately destroy everything he touches. That why we "need" God...Jesus Christ!!

    • @ZONEDINN528
      @ZONEDINN528 Год назад +1

      Your comment is a confused attempt at explaining away religions quite dismissively, and also suggests a child looking down upon their folks' innocence of faith, as ignorance. The keys lie in different states of consciousness.
      Where do you go when you're asleep, experientially? Sure, to your family you're your body sleeping in bed. But in your experience, where are you? Could at least some of those places be real experiences? What's happening when millions of people have a specific dream, which is followed by a strikingly similar event happening AFTER the dream occurred. Which means it's not the memory of an actual event that triggered a dream, but a dream that occurred before the relevent event took place.
      What happens to you when you... zone out for a while?
      What could be the advanced stages of these inner states like experientially? Can we investigate, since we have a whole biological system and a world that the organism "grew" out of in complete compatibility available to us 24/7? Can we explore the actual relationship between the two, down to ethereal physics? Thoughts, act of perception interacting with environment, triggering events, raising the dead parting the red seas, walking on water, splitting the Moon in half, etc. etc..
      THAT's the playground Prophets exist beyond. Remember, when those individuals accessed that center in themselves, the resulting phenomenon became observable to the masses around them, too. People called it "miracles," and religions were created, and so forth. The message was to discover your own inner, experiential relationship. We chose to worship the messengers, and not actually investigate our own potential inner evolution.
      Or, you could mechanically continue to explain everything away logically, dismissively... while ignoring the FACT that you don't know with absolute certainty.

    • @alvarocervantescamacho1979
      @alvarocervantescamacho1979 Год назад +1

      @@ZONEDINN528 Thanks for your comments. I do like being curious, but I do not like inventing evidence as I expect evidence to be a trigger of my curiosity. I enjoy listening to my senses when informing me of our environment, and my mind cooperate with them to build the enjoyment of understanding. I don't believe our mind is superior to our body, they evolved together and depend from each other for survival, but we have to be careful with our mind as it is capable of even ordering our body to destroy itself. Our mind functioning depends purely on our body, which depends on our environment (food, oxygen, etc.), our thinking is built by our society and our own processing of information received from our society and nature, and when such information does not have a relationship with reality, I just cannot process it. I just resist to use my time in investigating ideas without evidence, it is more interesting to investigate nature, as it has an infinite amount of unknowns that are waiting to be discovered. Basically, the way I see myself is that nature created its consciousness in our mind, not the other way around; our mind cannot create nature, and therefore inventions in our mind that don't relate to nature, are just fantasy, art, hallucination, dreams, or illusions (ideas themselves are not real, but can be models of reality though). And on the same topic, since I don't have any evidence of the spontaneous creations that religion claims, I conclude that religions are a product of our human mind and therefore nothing real. Have a healthy life and enjoy freedom.

    • @ZONEDINN528
      @ZONEDINN528 Год назад +1

      @@alvarocervantescamacho1979 Your perceptions create your reality, your interpretations either open it up to the reality that's supporting it, or close it down to be a self-enclosed bubble of circular definitions.
      The nature between your direct experience (sensory), and the larger than life sensory field that you call Nature... is the key here.
      Someone who makes that connection a living, breathing, direct relationship gives you guidelines on how to get there.
      You might call them prophets, saints, mystics, etc. They define the behavior that's supportive towards making that direct sensory connection (as opposed to just believing). They also define the behaviors that are counter-progressive.
      That's how I translate religions. And from your own favorable inclinations towards Nature as the basic defining force, as well as the vehicle of transformation is precisely my viewpoint as well.
      And that's exactly where science and religion converge.
      God bless, and Godspeed.

  • @patrickjauffret183
    @patrickjauffret183 3 года назад +4

    I wish to thank Genevieve Von Petzinge for this excellent talk. I intend to transcribe all the valuable information she shares here and keep it on file, so I can refer to it again from time to time.

  • @martini3524
    @martini3524 Год назад

    This lady keeps alive the relentless, human endeavour which began with the grave-makers, the shell-cutters, the Shamans et al.

  • @daniloordanza7012
    @daniloordanza7012 Год назад

    Wow thanks the wonderful information.

  • @demarjay2942
    @demarjay2942 4 года назад +3

    Wow such an interesting,thought provoking, excellent talk

  • @Nitephall
    @Nitephall 8 лет назад +4

    Fascinating stuff. Does anyone know of a book that would be a good introduction to this field?

    • @AdrianaColera
      @AdrianaColera 4 года назад

      Ina Wunn’s ‘Religions on the Prehistory’

    • @jeanmichel8368
      @jeanmichel8368 4 года назад

      All of Bernardo Kastrup's books.

    • @and__lam1152
      @and__lam1152 3 года назад

      Supernatural by Graham Hancock..... he fully interviews the guy from Witwatersrand uni mentioned here with the San people and dives deep into cave art

  • @angusmackaskill3035
    @angusmackaskill3035 2 года назад

    That was fascinating

  • @wynnsimpson
    @wynnsimpson 3 года назад +1

    Nicely done!

  • @konstantinethegr8
    @konstantinethegr8 4 года назад +3

    You also need to mention that early humans traveled/lived in groups and I believe religion was introduced as a way to introduce social norms and therefore the alpha/elder of the group could control and lead

    • @casteretpollux
      @casteretpollux 2 года назад

      Thats more like it. Religion only has really kicked in with agriculture, slavery to work land, hierachies, due to agricultural surpluses, and anxieties about rainfall and weather to grow crops.

  • @elainegoad2111
    @elainegoad2111 4 года назад +9

    My dog goes right for the treat container when we walk in the vet's waiting room. My dog jumps up to the counter in the exam room where there sits another treat jar. One time they moved the treat container in the waiting room to the other side and it was out of sight. My do attacked a large cat statue because that was in the same area where the big tread container usually sits. My dog remembers. Dogs also remember their companion dogs that have passed. I had a basset hound that looked for her sister for 2 months after her sister died. Another dog looked under beds and around the house when he heard his friend's name mentioned. We had to stop mentioning the deceased dog's name. etc...….

  • @louisesumrell6331
    @louisesumrell6331 Год назад

    Peace Love Kindness Respect, the more you give the more you get. Start with yourself because you deserve it 💖 🙏

  • @eddiemorrone870
    @eddiemorrone870 5 лет назад +6

    The "lion" standing on two feet is an important key. Cats and quadrupeds in general can stand on two feet, if only briefly. Meerkats alternate between bipedal and quadrupedal locomotion regularly. However, the carved stripes recall the markings of a tiger which we don't associate with bipedal locomotion. It's possible this is merely an accurate representation of a large cat standing on its hind legs. Viewing the figure and interpreting it as a cat, with a human body is perhaps the genesis of religious interpretation. I think the important question is when did we start interpreting these depictions as impossible entities? Ironically, it's probably after these depictions were made, not when they were made.