Not exact matches
I think Carl Jung came up with some good ways of thinking about our
cultural images and how they come about — that scientists many hundreds or thousands of years
later might have the same sorts of
cultural images informing their intuitions, and thus using those images as the basis for a theory of
evolution is not so much extraordinary than it is to be expected.
«Anatomically modern humans colonized Europe around 45,000 - 43,000 years ago, replacing Neanderthals approximately 3,000 years
later, with potential
cultural and biological interactions between these two human groups,» said Professor Hervé Bocherens, a biogeologist at the Senckenberg Center for Human
Evolution and Palaeoenvironment at the University of Tübingen, Germany, and lead author of a study published in the journal Scientific Reports.
Resonating with some of the
cultural concerns of the
late 1960's when the film was made, Planet of the Apes sets up the classic battle of
evolution verses religion, which may prove offensive to some (although the story's construct leaves room to argue that faith and science are not as different as the opinions of those who interrupt them).
What none of the posters seems to understand is that the recognition that certain undeveloped places deserve preservation is a
late development in
cultural evolution.