Originally posted by leadhead:
Ignoring the junk science argument that Homo Sapiens is really 300,000 years old...
Junk science? Have you actually researched the subject? I have. I've had my hands on a university textbook that presented the 300,000 y.a. date as a serious possibility. Not the only possibility, but a possibility.
It's not as if the date you propose has any incontestable proof to support it, its it?
the Vilani are NOT the same species as Terrestrial humanity. Yes, Traveller implies they are interfertile...
Traveller canon doesn't imply that Vilani and Solomani are interfertile. It states it flat out. Check the library data entries for Vilani and Zhodani in the original library data compilations. They're both listed as
Homo sapiens.
...but this seems unlikely though in 5000 years some way of geneering cross-breeding would be possible.
I agree that it's unlikely. But unlikely is not impossible. And we do have examples of species that paleontologists believe have remained essentially unchanged for longer timespans than that.
So weighing 'unlikely' against 'stated fact' it turns out that in the TU Vilani and Solomani (plus Zhodani a lot of Minor Human Races) are, indeed, interfertile.
As for 'canon' proof, I don't really need any...
You're right, you don't. Unless, of course, you want to have any credibility in a discussion concerning the Official Traveller Universe.
...as the Sollies are allegedly US and monotheism is the dominant religious paradigm on Earth.
Where do you get the notion that the Solomani are the US? What does that even mean?
However, in the Rebel Reporter in GDP's Traveller Digest that featured the Solomani point of view, Lawrence Trinoch the director of SolSec referenced the Holy Bible as a justification of a humano-centric government for the Sphere.
That's proof that Christianity is still present in some form and that Lawrence Trinoch is some form of Christian. However, it does not prove that monotheistic religions are the only religions on Terra, or even the dominant ones.
The vitriol of Hans' response suggests a personal hostility to Western religion...
Vitriol? You seem to have read my post as you read the Traveller canon. Let me assure you that I have no hostility to any religion (I do have a rather negative opinion of religious fanatics of any stripe, but then, I have a negative opinion about any sort of fanatic (Sports hooligans -- now, there's an animosity I could easily work up an enthusiasm for!

))
...many people have counted the Jews out (and more recently, the Christians as well) and yet they remain important players on the world stage.
No argument there, and I could easily accept that they remained important 3,000 years from now (though most likely in new incarnations). But you have no canonical proof at all (or even evidence) that Christianity and the other monotheistic religions have suppressed the polytheistic religions on Earth.
While the discovery of extra-terrestrial intelligence would spark a lot of discussion in religious circles, it would be far from a death-blow. Catholic authority has already accepted that alien intelligence could be Catholic (and thus has a soul and a place in G-d's plan).
Don't expect me to disagree.
Given this, I think its safe to assume that the Confederation remains largely Jewish/Christian/Islamic/Hindu/Buddhist
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought Hinduism and Buddhism were both polytheistic. In any case it's irrelevant, because there's no evidence that religious tolerance won't be the order of the day. (Nor any evidence that Emperor Strephon isn't Christian
)
[Lot's of irrelevant stuff snipped]
Okay, enough history, so why would our star worshipping Imperials hate the monotheistic Solomani so much?
Assuming facts not in evidence: That all Imperials worship stars and that they care two bits about what religion(s) the people of Terra belong to, much less hate them for it.
Looking back at the ancient Greco-Romans upon whose empires the 3I was closely modeled,
Mixing up meta-facts and TU facts. Marc & Co. may have gotten some ideas for the Imperium from Roman history, but Cleon I certainly didn't set out to recreate the Glory that was Rome.
...we find they too weren't comfortable with the Jews and later the Christians. Why? Well, polytheism is very flexible. If there are 12 gods living on Mt. Olympus why not another 12 in Valhalla and another 12 in the Nile Valley? Besides, a lot of these gods are similar. Everyone has a sky god, a sun god, a sea god, a trickster god, a love goddess, a moon goodess, etc. But along come the Jews and say 'all the gods of the nations are vanity' which is arrogant enough but then they have a law that says they cannot make sacrifices to the gods (supremists!!!) and that they are obligated to destroy pagan altars in their territory (butchers! oppressors!) and won't worship the state (traitors!)
The problem wasn't that they wouldn't worship the state, it was that they wouldn't worship the Emperor. Who was, at that point in history, considered divine. Which means that the Jews and Christians were guilty of sacriledge. Very serious stuff. In the Roman Empire, that is. But Strephon does not set himself up as a god, so that particular issue simply doesn't arise. I repeat: There's no evidence of any reason why anyone at Capital, from Strephon on down, give a tinker's cuss for what religion anyone on Terra belongs to. Nor is there any evidence that anyone on Terra cares what religion the Emperor belongs to.
... sounds a lot like the charges leveled against the Solomani.[
Could you elucidate, please? I find it difficult to understand how you can go from accusations of racial intolerance to accusations of sacriledge.
If the divide between the Vilani and Solomani is religious more than racial (and the more I think about it, the more sense it makes) the nature of the conflict is cultural and irresolvable.
Yes, because history shows us that all religious conflicts are irresolvable, right? That's why the Catholics and the Protestants are still shooting it out in France and Germany. And that's why the Swedish governement is currently engaged in ruthlessly repressing the worship of the Aesir[*], right?
(Note: The above should not be taken to mean that I think that there is any evidence of any religious conflict between Terra and the Imperium).
Hans
[*]
http://www.echoedvoices.org/Sep2002/Modern_Asatru.html