There's nothing wrong with speculation per se, but do you have any evidence that they were subject to divine revelation?
Obviously not. Did you really have to ask that question? Didn't you know the answer?
I'm sure in their minds they were reasoning it out to the best of their abilities but the same can be said of physicians who bled people.
Physicians bleeding people is physical. And it isn't done anymore. Science has learned better.
Creation beliefs transcend the physical. And they live on, despite being the among the oldest records we have.
There are many creation myths throughout human history. How are we to determine which were inspired by gods and which were just mythology?
Describe three creation myths.
First of all, no honest scientist would claim to have an error-free blueprint for anything.
Any PEs out there want to comment on that statement?
All scientific knowledge is open to revision in the light of new evidence.
Yup. Evolution continues, whether you like it or not.
But the fact that we longed to know our origins and the workings of the universe at all eventually led to the discovery of the investigative methodology we call "science".
The discovery of the investigative methodology we call science was a process of evolution, as well.
We shouldn't begrudge our ancestors their superstitions any more than we should begrudge astronomers who believed the Earth to be the center of the universe. But those who still cling to superstition in the face of contrary evidence are little different from an astronomer who still clings to Geocentricism.
Or as Issac Asimove put it:
When people thought the earth was flat, they were wrong. When people thought the earth was spherical, they were wrong. But if you think that thinking the earth is spherical is just as wrong as thinking the earth is flat, then your view is wronger than both of them put together.
The shape of the earth is a physical phenomena. God and spirit are not.
Science isn't even in the game yet, and it doesn't appear to be interested or even able to learn the rules.
If that is enough "evidence" for some to reject the mere possibility of God and spirit, oh well. They can go "in science."
I'll go with God, and have science in my briefcase, too.
