Interesting how the human mind works. In situations where we have a need for plain explanations to big events but they aren't available we then fill any gaps with imaginative ideas. It must be this...or it must be that.
In the UK there are mysterious sightings of a big black panther type of cat in rural areas every year. Funny how it's just before the tourist season. Same with the Loch Ness Monster. Why else would anyone want to go out of their way to a rural Scottish loch. Empty places need to generate footfall and excite the media producers to make their 'documentaries'. There is nothing better for this than some old legend of a 'creature' from folklore that is actually real and wanders about looking for groups of explorers with their cameras at the ready so they can perform as soon as the explorer shouts "OK and.....Action!"
I'm struggling to connect the DPI with the Loch Ness monster, although i know a someone who might....
Give me a Yeti any day.
It's the same process. There is a big event and people want an explanation. Monsters and mythical creatures or Aliens coming to life to fill in the gaps in peoples knowledge.
There is nothing wrong with healthy imagination and folklore had a purpose, and if hunting a yeti gets people out in the forest having fun and fresh air then there's nothing wrong in that either. But that's all it is. Imagination and lack of factual knowledge. But that's just my own opinion...I respect anybody having a different opinion to mine who believe Yeti's are real. I hope they are successful in finding one
I agree. Mankind wants to believe in the magical, it goes back to early childhood when you could spend half a day shrieking over the wonder of a snail in the garden as your first introduction to other lifeforms outside your home, and then there's the conditioning from your coercive belief in Santa and how crestfallen you were when you learned the truth. The idea that there are monsters in the mountains and beasties in the lakes and seas helps rekindle that sense of childlike wonder.
Faith offers the same comfort blanket, a belief in a supreme being, a creator, the ultimate man in the mountains, and all these beliefs have one thing in common, there is not a single shred of evidence to prove their existence, no definitive proof, and there never has been, but across millennia, and with many subscribers, it takes on the mantle of fact.
Rustem praying on the hike:
The DPI is certainly a bizarre incident, but plenty of other tragedies and crimes are, and we don't see police forces coming over all David Icke and suggesting it was a visitor from another dimension, or a shy hairy beast unknown to science.
"Yes, we believe the deceased was brutally murdered in a motiveless attack and we are asking the public to be especially vigilant and let us know if they have seen a 9ft tall biped covered in thick fur who we believe may have left the scene in a silver spaceship". I wonder what we'd think of the police's credibility if they did.
In my earlier satire I pointed out how no dead yeti has ever been found, or a lair or dung. By now you'd expect at least one of those to apply and any of them, even a skeleton, would confirm if this was a unique species through gene sequencing.
Unless of course you believe they are immortal, never shed fur, and wear nappies.