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History Channel - Quest for Dragons


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I watched it last night and enjoyed most of it. They did seem to dwell forever on the fact that people thought dinosaur bones were dragon bones. I did like the section about the North and Central American dragons.
 


I watched it last night and I liked it as well. I was really facinated with the religious aspect of the dragons as well as the fact that so many different sociieties have it in their culture. YOu have cultures talking about dragons whom hadn't met for centuries later. Wierd.

I was a little miffed, no mention of dungeons and dragons.
 



Jamdin said:
I watched it last night and enjoyed most of it. They did seem to dwell forever on the fact that people thought dinosaur bones were dragon bones. I did like the section about the North and Central American dragons.

I thought so as well. They didn't quite answer my question, "Why do we still care?" They pointed out that culture that embraces science "forgets" the dragon (contrasting to the "unscientific" China that dragons are still integral and many still search for dragons). They didn't quite explain why our modern society is still captivated by the dragon, even if it is fantasy.

I guess I was hoping for a psychological explaination of the "dragon fantasy".
 

ssampier said:
I thought so as well. They didn't quite answer my question, "Why do we still care?" They pointed out that culture that embraces science "forgets" the dragon (contrasting to the "unscientific" China that dragons are still integral and many still search for dragons). They didn't quite explain why our modern society is still captivated by the dragon, even if it is fantasy.

I guess I was hoping for a psychological explaination of the "dragon fantasy".
Actually they did kind of reference that it might be genetic inside of us. How the dragon is made up of all of our former predators. I thoughtit was an interesting argument
 

DonTadow said:
Actually they did kind of reference that it might be genetic inside of us. How the dragon is made up of all of our former predators. I thoughtit was an interesting argument


An interesting idea, but I guess I was hoping for more. I have my Bachelor's degree in Sociology, so I have difficulty accepting theories as "Well it's genetic...."

Genetics I can fully understand for physical features, such as eye color, height, etc, but I have a harder time with behavior. It's my bias, of course, so I wanted more information to tide my brain over.
 

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