Dear Stranger,
Thanks but I think I will stick to the old quote button
(trying to concentrate on reference or education sites and avoiding the overtly religious)
Just to clarify, although Armstrong is deeply passionate about all things religious the only agenda I can see from her books is religious unity between all religions and a deep heart felt need to show that compassion for all is uppermost, saying that Christians are not big fans of Armstrong.
Your link although interesting but you have not said anything about the second example I gave, indigenous tribes of Africa practising a religion similar to monotheism, don't forget the out of Africa theory.
I have another example of this but can't find any links so far, I posted a long time ago about a tribe from Papua New Guinea who somehow manage to escape unhurt from a tsunami that had hit their island ( not important ) the important part for this discussion is that they had been cut of from western civilisation since forever, they too practised a similar religion to monotheism.
I have done some searching around the subject of prehistoric/earliest religion (trying to concentrate on reference or education sites and avoiding the overtly religious) and have found much talk of animism, animal worship, shamanism, totemism, and ancestor worship with little mention of more abstract theism. It's not exhaustive - so I'm happy to pointed at other sites, or better still an expert on the subject (who doesn't have a religious agenda of their own). There seems to be universal agreement that the very earliest evidence of religious belief is in the form of burial of the dead, often with artefacts, but there is no way of knowing what sort of beliefs these practices were associated with.
Armstrong delves very deeply into ancient religions, the one I remember most is about some paintings found in french caves, a Shaman is seen crying over a beast that the tribe have just killed, Armstrong points out that this is still practised today today by some African tribes, the theory being that all life is sacred and the Shaman is trying to ease the passage of the beast into the after life.
So, I'm very far from convinced that humans have been struggling with what god (singular) is since they "stepped out of the cave"
For me ( my opinion ) it makes complete sense, why worship a whole host of deities when one will do, remember we are talking about very early man and as Armstrong points out when early man found that worshiping this one God was not working they would change over time and find a God more suited to their needs, yes! like most things, religion has evolved and is still evolving.
Still less convinced that their tendency to see deliberate agency behind natural or random events is anything more than a byproduct of an evolutionary survival mechanism (#26440).
Not sure where you are going with this, I have no problem with evolutionary survival mechanisms, man worshiping the sun because it is life giving, man worshiping the man in the moon because they see a face, man worshiping the god of crops because they need crops to survive, as I have said religion evolves and is still evolving.
Gonnagle.