I agree but leaving the sea was the precursor for the dinosaurs.If you want to go that far back, I think we should not underestimate leaving the sea.
Digitally Yours started it firstI'd be with you...but isn't that pre-historic?
If we were talking about the pivotal moments in WWII that would be interesting. I might have to lean to Dunkirk or Stalingrad...very tough callThere's another post about D-Day, today being the 46th anniversary.
A pivotal moment in the 2nd World War, and modern history itself.
It's either that or the day the Windows 7 phone was released......Now you are joking.
We would have still evolved, except this time we'd have larger BBQ'sI agree but leaving the sea was the precursor for the dinosaurs.
If the dinosaurs survived, we may not have evolved.
Just like the Flintstones did!....:eyebrows:We would have still evolved, except this time we'd have larger BBQ's
Most of the suggestions so far have been prehistoric, like agriculture and fire. Algebra, the printing press are interesting historic developments. They are technological advances rather than events but plainly influential.I'd be with you...but isn't that pre-historic?
Then you should have asked what is the most important event in human history. In terms of world history we are a blip.Most of the suggestions so far have been prehistoric, like agriculture and fire. Algebra, the printing press are interesting historic developments. They are technological advances rather than events but plainly influential.
I do still think that the french revolution fundamentally altered our conception of society and of ourselves in a way that the printing press and algebra did not.
It is your question define it as you like.Most of the suggestions so far have been prehistoric, like agriculture and fire. Algebra, the printing press are interesting historic developments. They are technological advances rather than events but plainly influential.
I do still think that the french revolution fundamentally altered our conception of society and of ourselves in a way that the printing press and algebra did not.
LMAO, I had thought about posting the above, but as it would have been the second post in the thread; I really didn't want to start the shit storm! Thanks for the laugh shack!The birth of fuji has to be it.
It is patently self-explanatory.
If there was no D-Day invasion, then what? True, Stalingrad weakened the German enemy.If we were talking about the pivotal moments in WWII that would be interesting. I might have to lean to Dunkirk or Stalingrad...very tough call
Wouldn't they have hunted apes or earlier forms of our species? Dinosaurs may have grown more intelligent.We would have still evolved, except this time we'd have larger BBQ's