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And it [religion] probably didn't originate with h. sapiens; it probably originated in one of our earlier ancestors.
It wouldn't surprise me if other social animals have the foundations of religion, particularly other primates. But since we can't exactly communicate with them that well, it's hard to say. And I'm not up on nonhuman animal cognitive science right now. I do know that the mourning/burial rituals of some nonhuman animals are suggestive, though.
I think it was fire. It held "power" keeping predators at bay, and provided warmth and comfort for early man. If it extinguished, they would need to seek fire again for it's protection and benefits.
If we're talking about actual religions, Hinduism, or rather, the Vedic religion, is the earliest, still practiced religion. All religions of today can be traced back to that.
If you're talking about religious practices in the earliest man, burial rituals seem to be the oldest form of religion.
Or burial rituals are the oldest that anthropology has found.
Next would be possible fertility deities with the Venus figurines found predating any civilization.
At this point were really just having fun poking in the dark on this topic
I wonder if the Venus figurines were more about sympathetic magic and less about representing female fertility deities?Or burial rituals are the oldest that anthropology has found.
Next would be possible fertility deities with the Venus figurines found predating any civilization.
Jane Goodall witnessed something interesting during her time observing chimps in the wild. One of those sudden, violent, tropical storms we hear about elicited an unusual group behaviour in a troop she was studying. The females and young gathered in a clearing, huddled together, while the larger males grabbed branches, hurled sticks and noisily rushed about screaming and attacking the vegetation near them. Goodall simply described the event without providing comment on it in her book, but for me it caused me to wonder whether this was how religion began and whether this exhibition the chimps put on was their effort to ward off the storm. In the end the exuberant males joined the females in the clearing and waited for the weather to clear.It wouldn't surprise me if other social animals have the foundations of religion, particularly other primates. But since we can't exactly communicate with them that well, it's hard to say. And I'm not up on nonhuman animal cognitive science right now. I do know that the mourning/burial rituals of some nonhuman animals are suggestive, though.
What do you suppose was the first religion? What do you think was characteristic of it?
Odd that this "main characteristic" was so readily forgotten by the vast majority of Adam and Eve's descendants around the world.God teaching Adam and Eve, and His Eternal Law was and still is the the main characteristic of it.
What do you suppose was the first religion? What do you think was characteristic of it?