Agemegos's Avatar
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Oz
Default Vilani creationists
I've just been reading the notes in Supplement 8 on the effect on Vilani progress in biology of the fact that Vilani found themselves unrelated to the rest of the creatures on Vland.
It seems to me that without the medical impetus to biology that the Vilani might have been slow to discover evolution at all. And when they did, biologists would have had a very hard time making the case that humans were no exception: both of the best pieces of evidence for human evolution are lacking on Vland. The position that plants and 'animals' might have evolved, but the humans were a special creation would have been intellectually respectable among the Vilani (and other races of Humaniti that rose out of obscurity on worlds other than Earth). When astronomers discovered the nature of the stars, and established the existence of extra-vloid habitable planets the proposition that humans had evolved on some other planet, and then travelled or been brought to Vland must have occurred to some, but hypothesising ancients of a lost interstellar technology is no more parsimonious then hypothesising a special supernatural creation. The first strong evidence that the Vilani find that Humaniti has evolved is either the slightly divergent characteristics of different strains of mankind on different planets or obscure evidence in the human genome.
Until the Vilani come to Terra to see pre-human fossils and to discover apes, primates, mammals, chordates, Animals, and eucaryotes, it must have been a defensible intellectual position among the Vilani and other non-Solomani Humaniti to believe that humans were a separate creation of the Divine. And Vargr, too.
Little wonder, then, that Solomani claims to have evolved on Terra didn't get much traction in establishing any sort of Solomani superiority: "You may be descended from an ape, mate, but I don't see that that makes you better than me."
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Oz
Default Vilani creationists
I've just been reading the notes in Supplement 8 on the effect on Vilani progress in biology of the fact that Vilani found themselves unrelated to the rest of the creatures on Vland.
It seems to me that without the medical impetus to biology that the Vilani might have been slow to discover evolution at all. And when they did, biologists would have had a very hard time making the case that humans were no exception: both of the best pieces of evidence for human evolution are lacking on Vland. The position that plants and 'animals' might have evolved, but the humans were a special creation would have been intellectually respectable among the Vilani (and other races of Humaniti that rose out of obscurity on worlds other than Earth). When astronomers discovered the nature of the stars, and established the existence of extra-vloid habitable planets the proposition that humans had evolved on some other planet, and then travelled or been brought to Vland must have occurred to some, but hypothesising ancients of a lost interstellar technology is no more parsimonious then hypothesising a special supernatural creation. The first strong evidence that the Vilani find that Humaniti has evolved is either the slightly divergent characteristics of different strains of mankind on different planets or obscure evidence in the human genome.
Until the Vilani come to Terra to see pre-human fossils and to discover apes, primates, mammals, chordates, Animals, and eucaryotes, it must have been a defensible intellectual position among the Vilani and other non-Solomani Humaniti to believe that humans were a separate creation of the Divine. And Vargr, too.
Little wonder, then, that Solomani claims to have evolved on Terra didn't get much traction in establishing any sort of Solomani superiority: "You may be descended from an ape, mate, but I don't see that that makes you better than me."