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Time Travel Discussion
The Creation of Man
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<blockquote data-quote="Dmitri" data-source="post: 16901" data-attributes="member: 397"><p><strong>Re: The Creation of Man</strong></p><p></p><p><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(\"Cubby\")</div></p><p> </p><p><span style="font-family: 'Arial'"><span style="color: black">How do we interact with knowledge that we do not have immediate use of, especially while it is not yet established and may never come to be? Good question. We can sure modify our worlds as we like (and deserve) them. Now what does knowledge have to do with the process? I guess it facilitates it. Putting pieces of the puzzle together helps to advance faster knowing the ways. We got intelligence; finally it started to work after thousands of years of a semi-dormant state, and after more than a hundred years of the complete nightmare in biology. I guess it is natural to advance and learn more of what things are, since we look equipped to do this. Practical interaction would be making better drugs and replacing cancer chemo we have now. Then it would be improving genomes and growing plants and other things in better ways. More general interaction is about what one feels up to, is it not? I just like to think we have the ability to research the world so why not use it. If this is the air that we breath, then if something is true, it will not wear thin like cloths, it will stay part of our world, esp. if you help make it better this way. We do not need other evidence than comparing genomes, wait two-three years. Many biologists say we will never find answers because we do not live a million years to set up evolutionary experiments. I should say to them, wait a couple of years now. The genomes will be compared more and will start to make a lot of new sense. </span></span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dmitri, post: 16901, member: 397"] [b]Re: The Creation of Man[/b] <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(\"Cubby\")</div> [font=Arial][color=black]How do we interact with knowledge that we do not have immediate use of, especially while it is not yet established and may never come to be? Good question. We can sure modify our worlds as we like (and deserve) them. Now what does knowledge have to do with the process? I guess it facilitates it. Putting pieces of the puzzle together helps to advance faster knowing the ways. We got intelligence; finally it started to work after thousands of years of a semi-dormant state, and after more than a hundred years of the complete nightmare in biology. I guess it is natural to advance and learn more of what things are, since we look equipped to do this. Practical interaction would be making better drugs and replacing cancer chemo we have now. Then it would be improving genomes and growing plants and other things in better ways. More general interaction is about what one feels up to, is it not? I just like to think we have the ability to research the world so why not use it. If this is the air that we breath, then if something is true, it will not wear thin like cloths, it will stay part of our world, esp. if you help make it better this way. We do not need other evidence than comparing genomes, wait two-three years. Many biologists say we will never find answers because we do not live a million years to set up evolutionary experiments. I should say to them, wait a couple of years now. The genomes will be compared more and will start to make a lot of new sense. [/color][/font] [/QUOTE]
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