Rolling_Stone
Well-Known Member
I'd say about the time the first human poked his head out his cave, saw the stars, and came to the realization I IS.When did religions first begin?
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I'd say about the time the first human poked his head out his cave, saw the stars, and came to the realization I IS.When did religions first begin?
religion-science said:As soon as humans had the ability to "wonder" about something, how, why ect. It is human nature to look for the reason for things.
When did religions first begin? Why?
As soon as the human species began to attach meaning to things.
Here's something to consider: Hubble deep space images indicate that the observable universe contains 50 to 100 billion galaxies, each containing billions of star systems. If inflationary theory is correct, the actual universe is in fact unimaginably bigger than that. It seems plausible, then, that other intelligent life forms elsewhere in the universe had religions of their own before our species evolved.Sunstone said:When did religions first begin?
I personally believe they are as old as our species (at the least), which puts their origins back 160,000 years (at the least). But when do you think they began? Why?
The origin of religion is an interesting topic. There is much evidence displaying that religion is a psychological by-product of something else. (Huzzah, using evolution to explain religion!) Most psychologists agree that the brain is a collection of modules for dealing with sets of needs, such as a module for dealing with kinship, one for empathy, love, and so forth. It is possible, therefore, that religion is merely a by-product of the misfirings of several of these modules. This theory would help to explain why religion exists in every human culture on Earth - it is nothing but an evolutionary mishap, a mutation.