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Assuming the modern accepted model of human history and pre-history is correct, why did ancient humans on the advent of writing not record proper documents of the past?
Did they really forget the last glacial period from 5000 years ago?
Did they really forget having used stone tools 1000-2000 years ago?
Did they REALLY think the world and humans just popped into existence 1000-3000 years ago with the help of a/the God?
Did the eventual transition from Copper to Bronze to Iron not "hint" at there being a previous step? If humanity is progressing, surely they had to have started somewhere? Did we REALLY ACTUALLY GENUINELY need modern science, carbon dating, archeology, biology/evolution, cosmology and more, just to finally realize that the world isn't ackshually 6000 years old and Adam didn't just get/make a bronze/copper hoe out of nowhere as soon as God kicked him out of the Garden and cursed him to work the ground for food?
I'll admit the Garden of Eden and Flood narratives DO hint at the transition from hunter-gatherer to settled lifestyle, and the sea level increasing rapidly after the glaciers started melting, but that could be a bit of a stretch... By that logic, you can just say that "let there be light" was a metaphor for the big bang and the evil jewish cabal knew the cosmological truth of the universe's origin all along and just turned it into a religious text to fool the goyim who couldn't crack the code until last century.
+Showing all 8 replies.
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>>18326067
Writing was invented for tax collection and trade. It was invented specifically for state resource allocation since they didn’t have money back then.
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>>18326067
>why did ancient humans on the advent of writing not record proper documents of the past?
Because the type of detached fact-collecting approach to history (or to anything, really) is a fairly recent invention. And a sick one. I suggest we stop recording history whatsoever.
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>>18326080
we must retvrn
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most people don't know the name of their ancestors five generations prior, let alone what they did for a living
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>>18326112
I do. He was a Prussian who migrated to America, served in the US cavalry our West, got injured, moved to the South, became a butcher, married an Italian woman, and was brought before court for verbally abusing a neighbor.
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>>18326117
how about your other 31 ancestors?
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>>18326122
I know most on one side but the other side past grandparents is a mystery. My dad is kind of… autistic, so all I can do is look at high profile relatives and trace back my heritage to the nobles on that side through biographies.
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>>18326117
>He was a Prussian who migrated to America
Dysgenics im einsatz.

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