Message from @SavvyPun

Discord ID: 681258750014652420


2020-02-23 21:55:18 UTC  

Oh please it's far more complex than you can think

2020-02-23 21:55:24 UTC  

and youll see that the oldest one is a much more primitive construction

2020-02-23 21:55:29 UTC  

of course it's not child's play

2020-02-23 21:55:48 UTC  

i'm saying it's not unachievable and you don't need to actually have a writing system and advanced calculus to figure it out

2020-02-23 21:55:55 UTC  

which is what entails "advanced physics"

2020-02-23 21:55:55 UTC  

There's nothing primitive about it

2020-02-23 21:56:03 UTC  

compared to what we can do it's primitive

2020-02-23 21:56:21 UTC  

Hammer and nails is primitive compared to that

2020-02-23 21:56:54 UTC  

if hammer and nails is advanced in your mind then i can see how you're flabbergasted by this

2020-02-23 21:57:28 UTC  

It's absolutely not primitive. Working with natural structural stone there has to be several specialists on site.

2020-02-23 21:57:35 UTC  

no shit

2020-02-23 21:57:42 UTC  

nobody is saying that cavemen built the stonehenge

2020-02-23 21:57:55 UTC  

It's the most pains taking art form in construction

2020-02-23 21:58:03 UTC  

okay

2020-02-23 21:58:08 UTC  

It's not primitive

2020-02-23 21:58:12 UTC  

it is

2020-02-23 21:58:21 UTC  

It's the most advanced

2020-02-23 21:58:29 UTC  

it's definitely not the most advanced, lol

2020-02-23 21:58:45 UTC  

If it's so primitive then why don't slaves have rock houses instead of the rich?

2020-02-23 21:58:56 UTC  

what

2020-02-23 21:59:03 UTC  

Exactly

2020-02-23 21:59:08 UTC  

no i don't understand you

2020-02-23 21:59:25 UTC  

It is the most costly form of construction

2020-02-23 21:59:32 UTC  

yes it is

2020-02-23 21:59:41 UTC  

doesn't mean it's advanced

2020-02-23 21:59:43 UTC  

Even steel and glass is cheaper

2020-02-23 21:59:51 UTC  

that's why stonehenge is the best thing these people built

2020-02-23 21:59:57 UTC  

yes and they didn't know how to make steel

2020-02-23 22:00:02 UTC  

not sure about glass

2020-02-23 22:00:04 UTC  

Oh it absolutely is far more complex than steel

2020-02-23 22:00:14 UTC  

okay, they didn't know how to make steel

2020-02-23 22:00:17 UTC  

that's what i said

2020-02-23 22:00:30 UTC  

Oh but they did

2020-02-23 22:00:38 UTC  

usage of iron as a primary metal came to britain and ireland between 600BC to 400BC

2020-02-23 22:00:43 UTC  

stonehenge is much older

2020-02-23 22:00:44 UTC  

I'm sure they made clay weapons

2020-02-23 22:01:01 UTC  

no, they made weapons first out of copper, then bronze, and finally switched to iron

2020-02-23 22:01:07 UTC  

in different periods of time

2020-02-23 22:01:18 UTC  

Who says?

2020-02-23 22:01:18 UTC  

they also probably mined tin over in britain

2020-02-23 22:01:23 UTC  

archaeological findings