The human herbivore was designed to live on
earth as an integral part of nature. He has become estranged from nature by a culture 'artificially scripted' by extremely ancient temple communities.
These societies determined at some point in their evolution to produce a class of
humans capable of violence to protect them and guard their treasures. They
set about to define cultural mores that would insure that captured children raised inside these artificial
reality cultures would never be able to learn the
truth of their naturally peaceful and attuned natures.
They raised them to kill
small animals; consume flesh;
war with each other; be competitive in all matters; never speak truthfully and never assume that anyone else was unless they were authority figures.
They taught them that only discipline should be trusted, mind over matter (meaning over ones natural instincts), that 'nature' was cruel, that only artificial engineering could insure comfort and
peace...
But mostly they taught them to always look to a leader and listen to nothing else. They instituted a culture of rewards and punishments and were able to create desensitized warriors that could kill on demand.
These meat-eating creatures, who other temple members considered
something of a monstrosity, were kept isolated from the rest of
society. Their creation also brought about the need for the creation of strict castes so that the greater
society would not be polluted by their conditioned and violent natures but also their unusual diseases.
Thus two completely
unique societies became both intertwined and interdependent with all the consequent convolutions of logic apparent
today.
Eventually, this 'warrior' class overthrew the original temple culture completely. These temple cultures existed across the globe and as each fell to a class of warriors, wars broke out between the now warrior-dominated temple societies as well.
This separation and artificial
society began with man's induced separation from nature, in particular, the most basic part which allows him to fully participate in all of nature... his human herbivore design.
See: Milton Mills, MD., "Comparative Anatomy of Eating"
This design is his
key to communion and the development of wisdom, a result of communion with nature.