One place I just noticed is a popular YT vid that animates TFaS and opens with the lion analogy. I've heard lots of speakers - Dawkins comes to mind - give various analogies to explain our superstition (or other behaviors) by talking about prehistoric man avoiding the rustle in the bushes when there's really nothing there, as that over-caution keeps us alive. It's a very popular sort of analogy and I think it's really bad because even though it's trying to communicate evolutionary pressures and selection, it also primes us to believe in Adam. Those instincts have been developing in basically every animal for millions to billions of years. There was no naive-to-nature man, and the true picture is that this occurs to us now because the average person doesn't know anything about nature. It shouldn't be: "The caveman hears a rustle in the bushes." It should be: "You, right now, are lost in a jungle and hear a rustle in the bushes."