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Can animals believe in something like people? How have scientists’ experiments proven that monkeys have “mystical moods”? How were ancient people able to see a living object in inanimate objects? For what purposes did religious rites and rituals arise? And why are attempts to talk to spirits “a consequence of our super-sociability”? In this episode of the program “Drobyshevsky. Homo sapiens,” Stanislav Drobyshevsky talks about how religion reflects human thinking. 00:00 “Drobyshevsky. Homo sapiens.” Sacred belief 01:16 Do animals have faith in something? 02:21 About the “mystical moods” of monkeys 07:09 Australopithecus: what finds indicate that they had an emerging religion? 11:33 Bruniquel Cave: why did the ancients burn cave bears? 16:50 Why do we know little about the religious rites and rituals of our ancestors? 22:21 "Ideas about spirits are a consequence of our super-sociability" 23:38 What was the use of religion for the ancients? Subscribe to the RTVI telegram channel: https://t.me/+f45ODW6gl60zY2My Subscribe to @RTVItainment and like RTVI News - all the main events in 24/7 format: / myrtvi