The Patterning Instinct: A Cultural History of Humanity's Search for Meaning

“What a great history of, and prediction for, human development! Of course human worldview determines our history and this influences what/how we act. As we are now impacting on a global scale, it is critical to review how we have gotten here so that we make decisions on where we might choose to go.

This is the first book that I have encountered that presents many of what I view as the most critical humans/individuals: hunter-gatherers, Akhenaten, Plato, Saint Paul, Philo of Alexandria, Roger and Francis Bacon, Einstein, Lovelock and many others. Their interjections to the developing Western worldview continue to be reflected in our present day perceptions. But their influences are rarely appreciated. Lent lays them out in a clear understandable fashion. 

His treatment of Eastern worldview may appear strange and foreign to most readers - as it is should. It is an excellent control study for those imagining the Western approach to nature and the environment as the only way.

Yes there is a lot of detail that may not appeal to all readers. Life is complicated. It is a mistake to think of humans - and our culture - as machines. There is relatively a lot of history to consider in assessing our present predicament. Our present beliefs are so firmly held that they not easily seen.

This book deserves the time and effort.”

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/3065334540

A church is not a graveyard! A pyramid is not tomb!

In the modern Western World we would not maintain that a church and its associated graveyard as being strictly funerary, even though they are found in close proximity of one another and present similar images. Similarly, even though the structures within the pyramid complex might use some of the same images, concepts and themes, they may have performed different functions for the pharaoh throughout their lives and after their deaths. It is most likely that the Egyptians buried their dead in tombs, celebrated in their temples and used the great pyramids for their own directed purposes that we are still trying to fully understand." 

http://www.awhico.com/blog/egyptianpyramidmysticism

There is no "self-help" - it takes more than one

As much as we have been taught that rationality is the key to success (that is "grit, determination, perseverance), research is showing that human resilience in the face of adversity is based on available community support - i.e. our irrational:

http://dalmag.dal.ca/2019/11/the-science-of-bouncing-back/

Change Your World: The Science and the True Path to Success

by

Michael Unger: http://www.michaelungar.com/books/

Terracing associated with catastrophic glacier collapse - observed over large spatial scales.

In 2017 a trip to Missoula, Montana, chasing the theories of catastrophic glacier collapse and the drain of the Glacial Lake Missoula (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Missoula), I got this photo of the terracing or wave-cut strandlines.

Terracing on the hill overlooking Missoula, Montana - elevation 1347 m/4265 ft.

Terracing on the hill overlooking Missoula, Montana - elevation 1347 m/4265 ft.

In 2019 while canoeing on Lake Windemere in the headwaters of the Columbia River, 500 km/300 miles away at an elevation of 800 m/2624 ft.

Terracing on the shores of Lake Windemere in the headwaters of the Columbia River at an elevation of 800 m/2624 ft.

Terracing on the shores of Lake Windemere in the headwaters of the Columbia River at an elevation of 800 m/2624 ft.

Amazing that whatever was occurring to make these cuts in the banks of the Columbia River would have occurred over such a wide geographic area!

Megalithic culture following the Younger Dryas

Malta’s stone works aligned to the first rising of Sirius in 5,000 years and followed its change for thousands of years: https://grahamhancock.com/reedijkl1/?

The creators of Carnac megaliths were sailors: https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/02/stonehenge-other-ancient-rock-structures-may-trace-their-origins-monuments?

Curious that Malta was and is an island requiring early sailing skills?