Origins: The Case for Ganymede

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Origins: The Case for Ganymede

According to evolutionists, we are supposed to be descended from hominids such as the Neanderthal. But in actual fact the gulf between hominids and humans is sufficiently wide that the same planet could not plausibly serve as a home world for both kinds of creatures. Somewhere in the universe there has to be a place where the first humans that ever existed lived. You’d need a direct line to God to know when and where that might have been but, in theory at least, the question as to the first place within our own system where humans ever lived has to be simpler than that and it should be possible for us to figure that one out.

The first question to answer is that of what exactly we mean by a “human home world”. A human home world would have to be a world on which humans could live with no semblence of technology whatsoever, no cars, no computers, airplanes, motorcycles, not even needles or thread much less sewing machines, not even clothing. Kind of like the Naked and Afraid game that you see on cable and Youtube channels except, on a believable human home world, the humans would have to be expected to survive more than a couple of weeks or a month. At the very least, the climate and native animals would not be constantly trying to exterminate the humans. Requirements for a human home world

At a bare minimum, a believable human home world would have to be:

  1. Warm (the human lack of fur)
  2. Bright (the relatively tiny human eyes)
  3. Wet (the aquatic adaptations that Elaine Morgan described). Notice that those adaptations were not merely for wading around in ankle or knee deep water and spearing fish; they were for spending major amounts of time in water that was at least over the heads of the people in question.
  4. Safe from sea monsters. There could not be any sharks, mososaurs or anything like that or even any jellyfish on a reasonable human home world.
  5. Safe from land monsters. Neither could there be anything on land waiting for dinner the first time a human ever stepped out of the water onto dry land…
  6. Safe from cosmic radiation. That requirement generally boils down to a planet having an intrinsic magnetosphere. Of course, in ourr own system as it exists presently, the only two rocky bodies with enough of an intrinsic magnetosphere to protect anybody from cosmic radiation are Earth and Ganymede.

Our system was originally a dual system, that is, a warm and bright Northern system consisting mainly of our present sun and Jupiter with its moons, and a very dark and cold Southern system consisting mainly of Saturn, Neptune, Mars and Earth, that is, the bodies with the roughly 26 degree axis tilts.

The idea here is to try to use a process of elimination to determine what in our prehistoric system might be indicated as an original human home world.

Criteria one and two automatically eliminate Earth and Mars (along with anything else from that Saturnian part of the system) from consideration and items four and five would eliminate Earth as well.

What that leaves are the large/Galillean moons of Jupiter, particularly Ganymede. The thing that eliminates the other three large moons is criteria six.

The Unabridged Version

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