Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
It was tongue in cheek, but your examples are nowhere near the Fertile Crescent where pork taboo was widely known. The hypothesis this taste was known when people first started eating pork? It seems a stretch to me. I agree cannibalism examples are widespread around the world, the Americas come to mind. But people would have had to still be cannibals at the time the pork ban began and that's where I'm having trouble seeing the connection.Humanity may have a long history of cannibalism as well as human sacrifice and burnt human sacrifice.
http://www.livescience.com/9118-gnawed-bones-reveal-cannibal-cavemen.html
The practice of cannibalism was still quite common among islanders of the South Seas until fairly recently, and may still be practiced.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...830733/Cannibal-fear-over-German-tourist.html
The hypothesis is that back in the Bronze Ages, the Abrahamic religious tradition may have been adopted and popular as humanity lost its hunger for some of the more barbaric practices of our past.
All this looking to fit the evidence to the conclusion ignores the evidence we do have. Food and other taboos are as common as god myths and there is little consistency except the fact it identifies and reinforces 'them' vs 'us'.
If you are going to explain it on the basis of heath, taste, economy, (did I miss anything?) then that same explanation should also explain other food taboos. But they don't. In addition there are non-food rituals and taboos that also fit the 'them' vs 'us' reinforcement hypothesis.
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