I always like it when the professional crazies weigh in.

54 points

I mean, yeah, this did happen. People hundreds of years ago found scary-looking bones, and imagined what they could be from. Dinosaur translates to basically Terror Lizard for a reason. That doesn’t mean that they were dragons though lmao

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25 points
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Supposedly the predecessors to the ancient Greeks mistook the skull of a breed of small elephants as the skull of a one-eyed giant.

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19 points

One look at an elephant skull and it’s pretty easy to understand how someone would think that

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32 points

Lmfao, well yes, it’s indeed very likely that people of ancient times have found dinasour bones and assumed it to be of a since long gone mystical creature such as a dragon.

There is nothing remotely insane about the assumption. It’s, in fact, highly probable.

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3 points

There are also a number of large lizards - komodo dragons and other variations of monitor lizards, alligators and crocodiles, pythons and other large snakes, and the various members of the iguana family - that have visual characteristics of mythologized dragons. Add in the human propensity to exaggerate and you end up with a series of increasingly dramatic artistic reinterpretations of a real animal.

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-4 points

??

What’s insane about that assumption? People had very limited information in the past. You see this, you think giant vicious fierce carnivore. You see this or this, you think giant one-eyed human.

And those are the skulls of hippos and elephants. What would you imagine when you see this then?

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11 points

There is nothing remotely insane

reading helps!

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-1 points

I guess I assumed that was sarcasm…

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6 points

Really all it comes down to is the implication that it “proves” dinosaurs and humans lived alongside each other, thus proving creationism is real. That’s the underlying argument in the fb post

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25 points

Well, yes. You find a sharp tooth that’s as long as someone’s finger you’re going to make up some kind of creature for it to have come from.

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2 points
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Okay, yes. But also: dragons originated from pre-radiation Africa. Every culture has it because they all had distant contact with that one.

Iirc, it’s thought that the original dragon was a flying feathered serpent and also a storm god.

Edit: sorry I was falling asleep and high while writing this.

Edit2: okay, I’m sober and awake now, so I guess I should revise my statement a bit. It is my amateur understanding, as a nerd who is not in any way a scholar of mythology, that there is a theory for the origin of mythological creatures known as dragons. I cannot attest to how well-founded this model is, but I believe it goes as such: a human culture, in Africa, existed prior to homosapiens leaving the continent. This culture is believed to have had storm deity that was a feathered serpent, and that deity was the basis of all dragon myths held by cultures that left the continent and the descendants thereof.

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4 points

Eh?

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1 point

It’s honestly better if you just watch the video. https://youtu.be/cwDPt1E4_Cg

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2 points

Can you share some source about that? Would like to read more about it

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2 points
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Unfortunately, I’m not a mythillogical scholar, so I’ll just link the nerd I listen to sometimes https://youtu.be/cwDPt1E4_Cg

I think this is the right one, but I need to get back to sleep.

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2 points

Pre-radiation?

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7 points
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I believe radiation in context means when humans radiated out of Africa across the world.

Meaning the dragon myth formed in Africa BEFORE people left Africa. The meaning here being that independent peoples didn’t witness something that made them all say dragon but rather they all carried the myth where they went.

Just my understanding of their statement.

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1 point
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-1 points

no.

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2 points

You linked to screenshot of this one insane people Facebook? You really do have a fitting username.

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13 points

Glad they took the oh-fuck spike off kettlebells over the years

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11 points
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When I was a kid I got this book from a garage sale. It was really neat, the illustrations were fire, and the author presents a theory on how dragons could have existed despite there being no physical evidence for them.

The gist is that dragons were actual creatures that were hunted to extinction in the iron age. But over the years the accounts turned to myth, and the mythological dragon is quite different from an actual dragon: essentially a hydrogen blimp with toxic blood that melts its bones shortly after it dies.

However, even as an eight-year-old I knew this was just a thought exercise. And as much as I think dragons are neat and would have liked to drink the koolaid, I guess I just don’t have what it takes to be a professional crazy.

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