> New Book: STONETHROWING THEORY THE DOMINANT THEORY OF ANTHROPOLOGY
> the behaviour of throwing by a animal
> for the first time
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> rocks, what future
> effect rockthrowing has, etc etc.
There are examples of birds, with brain sizes as big as the tip of
your pinky finger, that do a much better job hiding and remembering
the locations of food caches than do humans. Your hypothesis is
simpleminded nonsense. You don't even have a clue how to address this
as an evolutionary hypothesis.
> But of all the animal behaviours that use tools, none are so gigantic
> as the Throwing of
> rocks and stones by prehumans some 10 to 12 million years ago.
"Gigantic?" This is your reasoning?
> So as the overarm throwing
> increased, then the changes in the brain of the neocortex increased.
Oh, come on. How do you expect anybody to take this seriously?
claudiusdenk@sbcglobal.net - 01 Apr 2007 00:16 GMT
akdfjasd
>> New Book: STONETHROWING THEORY THE DOMINANT THEORY OF ANTHROPOLOGY
>
[quoted text clipped - 22 lines]
>
> Oh, come on. How do you expect anybody to take this seriously?