Ok.....so moving past this whole God thing, I want to post about my final thoughts / analysis on the finale, now that I have had a bit to digest the very ending.
This is mainly dealing with the final revelation of the finale in that the BSG folks were actually alive some 150,000 years in our past. I've got mixed emotions about this, and the fact that Hera was revealed to be our "Mitochondrial Eve." By mixed emotions I dont mean I like or dislike it in a particular way. Frankly I kind of liked the revelation and thought it was a neat way to wrap things up. However, I think there are TWO ways or time periods they could have ended the series with the BSG humans ending up. Both have merits, and I'm not sure which of the two I would have liked better or which would have worked better, so I am curious to see what the rest of you think.
(I realize its a bit much to have me say how I would rather have had the show end, as thats not the point, but I am curios to discuss it anyway)
Ending #1: (how the show did end)
* We find out the surviving humans from the colonies were alive 150,000 years in our past.
* Hera is revealed to be our "Mitochondrial Eve"
Some people think this was a happy ending. I'm not convinced that is a phrase I'd use to describe it. It is still a bit dark in some ways.
Points on this ending
* This ending means that the civilization of the surviving colonists completely dies out
* All technology, culture, knowledge, and everything that the colonists brought with them to Earth is lost and forgotten forever. Their legacy and their civilization DID come to an end (so this was a show about the end of a civilization afterall)
* While it was hinted at by Lee Adama that the colonists would bring the "best of themselves" to this new world, the reality as we know it today is that only Hera contributed. Even Baltar at the end, who stated his knowledge of farming, didn't survive.
Reasons for these conclusions
One reason for this conclusion is that the EARLIEST evidence of farming and agriculture is 10,000 years ago. If Baltar was successful is having kids, or teaching the natives about farming, it would have caught on considerably earlier. So given that is not how our timeline worked out, its likely to think that Baltar's and the Colonists knowledge died out with their generation, or at some point afterards
Another reason is the sheer timeframes at play. Ancient Egypt was some 15,000 years ago. Think about how far the human race has come knowldge wise in that 15,000 years. Now multiply that by a factor of 10. If the colonists had an impact on the natives at the time, or were able to continue to reproduce and grow the human race and pass their knowledge, things would have evolved a LOT quicker. Heck 8-9 civilizations could have risen to our level of technology and fallen in 150,000 years. No evidence of this exists. Not to say its not out there and hasn't been found yet, but given what we know its pretty clear that we don't have any modern day ties to anything that old...except our DNA.
So the ONE AND ONLY thing the surviving colonists brought to Earth and helped was Hera, and how she ended up "Seeding" our DNA. She is the one who could be considered the "mother of modern man" and perhaps she with some of the native humans combined to have the human race evolve into modern homo sapiens. Without their arrival we may not have evolved the same way, or much at all. That, at least, seems to be what the story implies and its importance.
Things that work with this ending:
1) It really hammers home how important Hera really was. She WAS the future of the human race. Without her life on Earth would not have developed as it did
2) It also reinforces the Hybrids prophecy about Kara being the "harbenger of doom and leading the humans to their final end" (paraphrased). Kara DID lead those humans to their final end. That civilization died on Earth some 150,000 years ago. They ended, but through Hera, something new was able to grow and develop on its own.
3) Having it be such a drastic restart of life and civilization, it does stand the best chance of breaking the cycle of viloence (as hinted at by Head Six and Head Baltar in present day Earth.
So this is how the show ended, and I did like it and thought it was a neat way to end things, the part with Hera being the neat touch and revelation.
However, before the finale I was hoping for them landing in a different time period, and here is how that might have worked out.
Ending #2: BSG Colonists arrive some 15,000 years ago
By having them land and settle in more recent history, it would seem to hold truer to some of the themes of the original series (which this series did hold very close to).
* The colonists, with modern humans already on Earth, could have taught us agriculture, as the timeframes would have been right to do this. Baltar could have been the one who brought agriculture to Earth's human population
* The colonists could have also helped with development of early civilization
* Been the ones who inspired the Great Pyramids
* Been the ones who inspired Mayan and Mormon legends about humans coming from Space and settling on Earth (which is the concept the original series was based on)
* Could have been the ones who inspired Greek Mythology and been the reasons why some of the ancient Gods have the names they do.
Now the one thing this wouldn't do, is allow for Hera to be our Mitochondrial Eve. Basically, this is saying that human life already evolved on Earth on its own, and the BSG colonoists just help bring civilization here, based on theirs. It would help signfy that their civilization didn't die out, but it lives on through us. This obviously makes Hera less important, and also doesn't satisfy Starbuck's prophecy about leading them to their end, because one could argue that if they pass on so much of theirselves into ancient Earth, that they lived on.
It would fit better with Lee Adama's comments in the finale about giving the best of themselves to the humans of earth.
So this wouls have been another way to end the series, and the one I was sort of hoping for. I'll admit I do like it a bit better, but it doesn't FIT as well with the story in some ways as the one they chose did.
Anyone else have any thoughts along those lines or have you drawn similar conclusions?