(December 8, 2017 at 2:20 am)Fake Messiah Wrote: Wouldn't it be interesting if there was a museum in which people could walk trough all geological periods of Earth history? Like maybe every room is one period filled with models (life sized?) of animals and plants that lived in that period. They start from pre-cambrian, then cambrian, oh I just walked into Ordovician, Silurian, Devon, Carboniferous, Permian (with it's extinction), Triassic, Jurassic, Cretaceous, Paleogene, Neogene - early humans and us.
It would be not just super fun but also give people an idea of how prehuman history unraveled, because it seems most of the people have all the periods just mashed together in their heads.
Along side that, should also be a museum of human cruelty. The best known one is the Holocaust Museum, but there is not one nation or religion that has not had its cruelty to outsiders, when you take into account global history.
I've mentioned it before, when I visited Japan in 2000, I visited a history museum in Yokohama. In it, they depicted war and art, from antiquity, to the past 2 centuries and showed all the time their conflicts with the rest of Asia. When it got to the age of photography and war, they depicted the brutality on their population by their rivals in those conflicts. I am quite sure China has museums that depict their wars and their dead too.
Dead is dead to me, and I don't think enough humans worldwide understand how fragile life is or how alike we are more than we are different.