![]() Even in the days of Cain it was fatal to go abroad alone without some mark of group association. The lone man was helpless unless he bore a tribal mark which testified that he belonged to a group which would certainly avenge any assault made upon him. Rather did the early races learn by sad experience that “in union there is strength” and it is this lack of natural brotherly attraction that now stands in the way of immediate realization of the brotherhood of man on Urantia.Ħ8:1.2 (763.5) Association early became the price of survival. Protective SocializationĦ8:1.1 (763.4) When brought closely together, men often learn to like one another, but primitive man was not naturally overflowing with the spirit of brotherly feeling and the desire for social contact with his fellows. In more recent times the yellow race and the white race have presented the most advanced social development on Urantia. The blue man most of all profited by these early social teachings, the red man to some extent, and the black man least of all. These cultural achievements are preserved only by the enlightened conservation of social inheritance.Ħ8:0.3 (763.3) Social evolution of the co-operative order was initiated by the Dalamatia teachers, and for three hundred thousand years mankind was nurtured in the idea of group activities. The superior qualities of civilization-scientific, philosophic, and religious-are not transmitted from one generation to another by direct inheritance. Robertson, D.S., Feedback Theory and Darwinian Evolution, Journal of Theoretical Biology, 152/4, 469-484, 1991.68:0.1 (763.1) THIS is the beginning of the narrative of the long, long forward struggle of the human species from a status that was little better than an animal existence, through the intervening ages, and down to the later times when a real, though imperfect, civilization had evolved among the higher races of mankind.Ħ8:0.2 (763.2) Civilization is a racial acquirement it is not biologically inherent hence must all children be reared in an environment of culture, while each succeeding generation of youth must receive anew its education.Robertson, D.S., Is Darwinian Evolution a Mathematically Stable Process?, Evolutionary Theory, 10 (5), 261-272, 1994.Theoretical Considerations, Complexity, 2, #1, 10-14, 1996. Grant, Feedback and Chaos in Darwinian Evolution: I. Grant, Feedback and Chaos in Darwinian Evolution: II. ![]()
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