Origin of Agriculture/Human CivilizationAgriculture's Origin Fits RTB Human Origins Model4/1/2005 Did Adam and Eve really exist? Some people say no. They view the biblical account of humanity's beginning as mythical. However, recent scientific advances substantiate the historicity of the biblical record,1 and now a new discovery sheds light on an apparent discrepancy regarding the emergence of agriculture. Arts Own Big Bang Affirms Special Creation1/1/1999 If the naturalists and Darwinists were right about the evolution of humankind, we would expect both the quantity and quality of human artwork to increase gradually over time. New research, however, shows that the opposite is the case. Anthropologists have discovered what they call the “big bang” of artistic expression. Previous to about 40,000 years ago, art appears to have been both rare and “rough,” or crude. Cain Worked the Soil and Abel Tended the Flocks10/25/2007 New insight into the origin of agriculture buttresses a weak spot in RTB’s human origins model. Equipped for High-Tech Society7/1/2004 Human beings seem vastly "over-endowed" for hunter-gatherer or agrarian existence. For tens of thousands of years humanity carried intellectual capacities that offered no discernable advantage. From a Darwinian perspective, such capacities would be unlikely to arise and, even if they had randomly emerged, they would likely have been eliminated or minimized by natural selection. Human Curiosity as Evidence for God10/1/2004 Why do human beings ask why? Does this driving curiosity simply reflect humans' intellectual superiority? According to evolutionary theory, the distinctions between humans and other species are matters of degree, not of kind. What does careful observation reveal? New Date for First Aussies4/1/2004 Australia, do we have a problem? It may seem so, or at least it did a few years ago. The RTB creation model places the creation of humanity at roughly 50,000 years ago, with the spread of peoples and civilization outward from Mesopotamia some time after that, but probably no earlier than 30,000 years ago. Staving Off an Ice Age4/1/2005 Global warming may not be all bad, and it may not be all that recent. Drilling deep into the ice of Antarctica and Greenland, scientists have found a different story, including some thought-provoking surprises.1 They see hints of a providential connection between global warming and civilization's development-not to mention survival. The Broken Tie that Binds
10/1/1996 According to Genesis, the human race both before and after the Flood ignored God's direct command to spread out and fill the earth. Despite God's warnings about the seriousness of disobedience, several generations of post-Flood people refused to budge from the Mesopotamian flood plain. The Great Divide of Peleg's Time1/1/1998 In the genealogy of Noah's son Shem, we see the name Peleg and along with it a brief note that "in his time the earth was divided." I've linked this statement with the break up of the warm land bridge that permitted migration from Siberia to Alaska-eastern hemisphere to western-between 14,000 and 11,000 years ago. Wheat Tells a Story of Beginnings1/1/1999 DNA “fingerprinting” helps with investigations beyond the criminal courtroom. In one recent case, this research technique was applied to the study of agriculture’s origin, and the results provide a significant corroboration of biblical historicity. According to that study, Y-Chromosome Reveals Evolutionary Limits
by Dr. Hugh Ross Y-chromosome studies have just answered a long-standing anthropological question: Are modern Japanese people descended from the Jomon or from the Yayoi people?1 The Jomon migrated to Japan from the Asian mainland about 12,000 to 14,000 years ago when sea levels were so low that land bridges permitted. Origin of Agriculture/Human CivilizationScience and Faith IssuesHugh Ross, Dave Rogstad & Kenneth Samples Smelly Lakes, String Theory, MultiverseHugh Ross, Jeff Zweerink, and Joe Aguirre Origin of Agriculture/Human Civilization |
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