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The John Batchelor Show

CLUES OF ORIGINS: 2/4: Impact: How Rocks from Space Led to Life, Culture, and Donkey Kong Hardcover – by Greg Brennecka (Author)

The John Batchelor Show

John Batchelor

Society & Culture, Arts, News, Books

4.52.8K Ratings

🗓️ 12 May 2024

⏱️ 8 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

CLUES OF ORIGINS: 2/4: Impact: How Rocks from Space Led to Life, Culture, and Donkey Kong Hardcover – by Greg Brennecka (Author)

https://www.amazon.com/Impact-Rocks-Space-Culture-Donkey/dp/0063078929/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=

Impact argues that Earth would be a lifeless, inhospitable piece of rock without being fortuitously assaulted with meteorites throughout the history of the planet. These bombardments transformed Earth’s early atmosphere and delivered the complex organic molecules that allowed life to develop on our planet. While meteorites have provided the raw materials for life to thrive, they have radically devastated life as well, most famously killing off the dinosaurs and paving the way for humans to evolve to where we are today.

As noted meteoriticist Greg Brennecka explains, meteorites did not just set us on the path to becoming human, they helped direct the development of human culture. Meteorites have influenced humanity since the start of civilization. Over the centuries, meteorite falls and other cosmic cinema have started (and stopped) wars, terrified millions, and inspired religions throughout the world.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is a

0:03.7

a CBS eye on the world. I'm John Bachelor with Jessica Pierce and Mark

0:08.8

backoff. A dog's world is their new presentation of imagine, this is a thought experiment,

0:14.8

imagining the lives of dogs and world without humans. So we've gone through the home

0:19.3

dogs, the free-ranging dogs, and the feral dogs. We are made the transition. We're now in a world

0:25.3

where there's no memory, first generation, second generation, third generation of

0:30.1

human beings, homo sapiens. The dogs are in packed behavior. Then they've found a

0:37.2

style that suits them in the niche where they live, desert to forests, to high latitudes, and we're dealing with some truths that we can

0:49.6

imagine for the future.

0:52.1

And Jessica, one of the things that I was most impressed by is that

0:56.5

there is no future dog. There is a universal dog. We've talked about its

1:01.6

characteristics, but I'm keen on its psychology on what it

1:07.2

would imagine the world to be. Does it see itself as a as a as top of the food chain these dogs hunting in packs because

1:16.9

my observation is that wolves are in their environment certainly dominant?

1:23.7

Will dogs in the future see themselves as dominant,

1:26.9

Jessica?

1:29.1

That's a good question.

1:30.1

I'm not sure. I think it could go either way. I think my intuitive answer to your

1:38.6

question is dogs are just going to see themselves as a sort of fluid part of their ecosystem, that they don't have this sense of the sort of meta place in the world the way we might imagine them to be.

1:56.2

They will just be who they are

1:59.1

and do what they need to do to get by. Mark, I come to you with the wild animal in dogs.

2:07.0

It returns, but presumption in your book is that it doesn't return to the wolf.

...

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