...Perhaps so. It is interesting, however, when you put it like that. Learning how ancient people lived, and how they interacted with one another.
[...]
The dragons are...they're gods to us. The First Ones left behind evidence of their interactions with our ancestors, and their history with us is well-recorded and passed down. If there's no evidence of your ancient creatures having any sort of civilized interactions or society, then I suppose it's fair to consider them animals, as there's no proof that they were otherwise.
I'm sorry for questioning so much. There's just something strange to me, about the idea that one could, in theory, dig up the bodies of the gods and keep them in such a way. Grave sites should still be left undisturbed, but if I had to choose, doing something that I would find strange to my body seems less...sacrilegious, I suppose? I didn't mean to be so unrelenting, however.
no subject
[...]
The dragons are...they're gods to us. The First Ones left behind evidence of their interactions with our ancestors, and their history with us is well-recorded and passed down. If there's no evidence of your ancient creatures having any sort of civilized interactions or society, then I suppose it's fair to consider them animals, as there's no proof that they were otherwise.
I'm sorry for questioning so much. There's just something strange to me, about the idea that one could, in theory, dig up the bodies of the gods and keep them in such a way. Grave sites should still be left undisturbed, but if I had to choose, doing something that I would find strange to my body seems less...sacrilegious, I suppose? I didn't mean to be so unrelenting, however.