Evolution is a fact. A fact is an agreed-upon observation made by competent observers. Before Columbus, it was a fact that the world was flat. The Buddhist view - if you are concerned about the differences between creationism and evolution, as I suspect you are because you posed this question - is that it really doesn't matter. The things we find ourselves concerned with in this life, in this apprehension of reality, seem very important to us because when we aren't enlightened we live in the day-to-day world. Even so, we need to stay aware of the fact that there is a deeper understanding of reality, in which creationism and evolution are paltry distinctions, unimportant to bringing lasting happiness to all sentient beings.
The Vatican's view of evolution is that it could be possible but in some point, God must have put a human soul into a human.
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how has Charles Darwin influenced people about modern views of evolution
nnop
There is no central Buddhist tenet regarding this.
Buddhist believe there are no gods. Evolution would be the logical belief they would follow.
Museum of Human Evolution was created in 2010.
Subdisciplines used to understand human evolution include paleoanthropology, genetics, archaeology, paleontology, and primatology. Each of these fields provides unique insights into the origins and development of humans through the study of fossil evidence, genetic analysis, ancient artifacts, and the behavior of closely-related species.
Biological anthropology is the branch of science that studies human evolution.
Hey paul
Human evolution started with a species fron the homo called the HOMO SAPIENS.
The human evolution theory is the scientific study of how humans evolved from earlier species of primates. It explains how anatomical, genetic, and behavioral characteristics have changed over time, leading to the development of modern humans. Key milestones include bipedalism, tool use, brain expansion, and cultural evolution.