Posted on 08/13/2006 4:11:37 PM PDT by blam
Please don't misunderstand - ringworms HELP control your (red head) immune system. Not designed to work in a sterile envrinonment.
LOL Maybe if I keep at it I'll figure out why I get so irked by this whole topic of Neanderthal lineage (or absence thereof). It's difficult to find an issue of less practical significance, and yet I just can't seem to leave it alone.
Put it in the dishwasher?
Let's see: I've discussed goat diapers, naughty veggies, cave-sex, and rubber duckies on FR today. I think it might be time to call it a night. I shudder to guess what I'll dream about. :)
And I. Magnin Woman.
To paraphrase Jonas Acme, fair-haired pharaoh of American Industry---
(In stentorian, pontificating voice:)
"The human brain,
is so powerful,
that it can only be used,
for good or evil."
sigh. subtlety never works with you people.
Well, exactly what trajectory would you predict for the result of inbreeding between Homo Sapiens and Neanderthals?
She seemed so nice at the bar...
Yes if you believe my declaration is inane your continued declaration of absolutes that you posit here must be totally idiotic.
For starters, I would predict that Celtic peoples would be among the first to advance, rather than among the last,* since Celtic peoples would be expected to retain the most Neanderthal genes.
* And that almost entirely derivative of non-Celts.
PS. To be more precise, that's the trajectory I would predict in the event that 'accelerated Northern Hemisphere advancement' was attributable to Neanderthal/Cro-Magnon interbreeding. Something else I would predict in that case is for civilization to arise and flourish in those regions first, rather than in the Nile, Euphrates, Indus, and Yellow river valleys. Within Europe itself, I would predict the northwest to be more advanced than the southeast, which was not the case until very modern times.
The only advance, albeit a huge one, that was first achieved in northwest Europe was the Industrial Revolution.
"sigh. subtlety never works with you people."
LOL again ... Now you're into type-casting with your "you people" remark.
Why don't you try again and leave out the subtlety ?
Nah, the Dutch invented modern capitalism long before (the 1600's), along with notions of tolerance that took a long time to take elsewhere. The Brits invented limitations on the authorithy of the executive, and the rule of law, before that, the modern sense of both.
You are absolutely right about that, but I was effectively conflating early market capitalism with later industrial capitalism. That was an error of sloth on my part; I was just speed typing in my rush out the door. :)
At least, in the meaningful sense that you intended, I should add.
Ya, Greece did a lot of things first, and inspired later generations, far later, and still inspire. But, I was being as you know, a bit more time specific. In any event, Britian did it first on a much larger and more complex scale. Rome also had laws before Britain, but well, Britain invented an independent judiciary, with teeth, along with juries, again in a state systematic way.
Well, I haven't the slightest dispute with any of that. So, what does that tell us in terms of the question at hand? Perhaps Neanderthal ingenuity was just dormant within Celtic blood and simply need to get activated by a Teuton/Norse infusion?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.