• Re: Humans began to rapidly accumulate technological knowledge through

    From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Thu Jun 20 03:29:43 2024
    On 20.6.2024. 3:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 19.6.2024. 6:40, Primum Sapienti wrote:

    https://news.asu.edu/20240617-science-and-technology-asu-study-points-origin-cumulative-culture-human-evolution

    Each of us individually is the accumulated
    product of thousands of generations that
    have come before us in an unbroken line.
    Our culture and technology today are also
    the result of thousands of years of
    accumulated and remixed cultural knowledge.

    But when did our earliest ancestors begin
    to make connections and start to build on
    the knowledge of others, setting us apart
    from other primates? Cumulative culture —
    the accumulation of technological
    modifications and improvements over
    generations — allowed humans to adapt to a
    diversity of environments and challenges.
    But, it is unclear when cumulative culture
    first developed during hominin evolution.

    A study published this week in the
    Proceedings of the National Academy of
    Sciences journal by Arizona State
    University researcher Charles Perreault
    and doctoral graduate Jonathan Paige
    concludes that humans began to rapidly
    accumulate technological knowledge
    through social learning around 600,000
    years ago.

    “Our species, Homo sapiens, has been
    successful at adapting to ecological
    conditions — from tropical forests to
    arctic tundra — that require different
    kinds of problems to be solved," said
    Perreault, a research scientist with
    the Institute of Human Origins and an
    associate professor with the School of
    Human Evolution and Social Change.
    “Cumulative culture is key because it
    allows human populations to build on
    and recombine the solutions of prior
    generations and to develop new complex
    solutions to problems very quickly.

    "The result is, our cultures — from
    technological problems and solutions
    to how we organize our institutions —
    are too complex for individuals to
    invent on their own.”

    To investigate when this technological
    turn may have begun and to explore the
    origin of cumulative culture, Paige and
    Perreault analyzed changes in the
    complexity of stone tool manufacturing
    techniques across the past 3.3 million
    years of the archaeological record.

    As a baseline for the complexity of stone
    tool technologies achievable without
    cumulative culture, the researchers
    analyzed technologies used by nonhuman
    primates — like chimpanzees — and stone
    tool manufacturing experiments involving
    inexperienced human flintknappers and
    randomized flaking.

    The researchers broke down the complexity
    of the stone tool technologies by the
    number of steps (procedural units, or PUs)
    that each tool-making sequence involved.

    The results suggested that from around
    3.3 to 1.8 million years ago — when
    australopiths and earliest Homo species
    were around — stone tool manufacturing
    sequences remained within the range of
    the baselines (1 to 6 PUs). From around
    1.8 million to 600,000 years ago,
    manufacturing sequences began to overlap
    with and slightly exceed the complexity
    baseline (4 to 7 PUs). But, after around
    600,000 years ago, the complexity of
    manufacturing sequences rapidly increased
    (5 to 18 PUs).

    “By 600,000 years ago or so, hominin
    populations started relying on unusually
    complex technologies, and we only see rapid
    increases in complexity after that time as
    well. Both of those findings match what we
    expect to see among hominins who rely on
    cumulative culture,” said Paige, a
    postdoctoral researcher at the University
    of Missouri and an ASU PhD graduate.

    Tool-assisted foraging may have been the
    impetus for the earliest beginning of the
    evolution of cumulative culture. Early
    hominins, 3.4 to 2 million years ago,
    likely relied on foraging strategies that
    require tools — like accessing meat, marrow
    and organs — leading to changes in brain
    size, lifespan and biology that set the
    stage for cumulative culture.
    ...


    https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2319175121
    3.3 million years of stone tool complexity
    suggests that cumulative culture began
    during the Middle Pleistocene


    Significance
    Our species, Homo sapiens, occupies a
    uniquely diverse set of ecological
    habitats. Humans expanded into tropical
    forests and arctic tundra through
    cumulative culture. Cumulative culture
    is the accumulation of modifications,
    innovations, and improvements over
    generations through social learning.
    Generations of variant accumulations
    allow humans to use technologies and
    know-how well beyond what a single
    naive individual could invent
    independently within their lifetime.
    We analyzed the stone tools made
    during the last 3.3 My. We found that
    these stone tools remained simple until
    about 600,000 B.P. After that point,
    stone tools rapidly increased in
    complexity. Consistent with findings
    from other research teams, we suggest
    that this transition signals the
    development of cumulative culture in
    the human lineage.


    Abstract
    Cumulative culture, the accumulation of
    modifications, innovations, and
    improvements over generations through
    social learning, is a key determinant
    of the behavioral diversity across Homo
    sapiens populations and their ability
    to adapt to varied ecological habitats.
    Generations of improvements,
    modifications, and lucky errors allow
    humans to use technologies and know-how
    well beyond what a single naive
    individual could invent independently
    within their lifetime. The human
    dependence on cumulative culture may
    have shaped the evolution of biological
    and behavioral traits in the hominin
    lineage, including brain size, body
    size, life history, sociality,
    subsistence, and ecological niche
    expansion. Yet, we do not know when, in
    the human career, our ancestors began to
    depend on cumulative culture. Here, we
    show that hominins likely relied on a
    derived form of cumulative culture by
    at least ~600 kya, a result in line
    with a growing body of existing
    evidence. We analyzed the complexity
    of stone tool manufacturing sequences
    over the last 3.3 My of the
    archaeological record. We then compare
    these to the achievable complexity
    without cumulative culture, which we
    estimate using nonhuman primate
    technologies and stone tool
    manufacturing experiments. We find
    that archaeological technologies
    become significantly more complex
    than expected in the absence of
    cumulative culture only after
    ~600 kya.


            Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times more, 600 kya. Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but 500 times more 450
    kya.
            But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well, science
    will wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence, stupid science.

    Science, with its stupid rules, only hinders human understanding,
    stupid science. Like, somebody deliberately demand that accepted view
    meet all the strict criteria, so that it never moves forward. Nobody understands anything. They were studying so hard, they accumulated so
    large knowledge, yet, they completely lack in understanding, because
    studying *isn't* understanding. The one who doesn't understand, the
    bigger the knowledge he has, the more chance that he will look at the
    wrong direction. Because he is unable to understand, studying isn't
    everything.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Primum Sapienti on Thu Jun 20 03:24:40 2024
    On 19.6.2024. 6:40, Primum Sapienti wrote:

    https://news.asu.edu/20240617-science-and-technology-asu-study-points-origin-cumulative-culture-human-evolution

    Each of us individually is the accumulated
    product of thousands of generations that
    have come before us in an unbroken line.
    Our culture and technology today are also
    the result of thousands of years of
    accumulated and remixed cultural knowledge.

    But when did our earliest ancestors begin
    to make connections and start to build on
    the knowledge of others, setting us apart
    from other primates? Cumulative culture —
    the accumulation of technological
    modifications and improvements over
    generations — allowed humans to adapt to a
    diversity of environments and challenges.
    But, it is unclear when cumulative culture
    first developed during hominin evolution.

    A study published this week in the
    Proceedings of the National Academy of
    Sciences journal by Arizona State
    University researcher Charles Perreault
    and doctoral graduate Jonathan Paige
    concludes that humans began to rapidly
    accumulate technological knowledge
    through social learning around 600,000
    years ago.

    “Our species, Homo sapiens, has been
    successful at adapting to ecological
    conditions — from tropical forests to
    arctic tundra — that require different
    kinds of problems to be solved," said
    Perreault, a research scientist with
    the Institute of Human Origins and an
    associate professor with the School of
    Human Evolution and Social Change.
    “Cumulative culture is key because it
    allows human populations to build on
    and recombine the solutions of prior
    generations and to develop new complex
    solutions to problems very quickly.

    "The result is, our cultures — from
    technological problems and solutions
    to how we organize our institutions —
    are too complex for individuals to
    invent on their own.”

    To investigate when this technological
    turn may have begun and to explore the
    origin of cumulative culture, Paige and
    Perreault analyzed changes in the
    complexity of stone tool manufacturing
    techniques across the past 3.3 million
    years of the archaeological record.

    As a baseline for the complexity of stone
    tool technologies achievable without
    cumulative culture, the researchers
    analyzed technologies used by nonhuman
    primates — like chimpanzees — and stone
    tool manufacturing experiments involving
    inexperienced human flintknappers and
    randomized flaking.

    The researchers broke down the complexity
    of the stone tool technologies by the
    number of steps (procedural units, or PUs)
    that each tool-making sequence involved.

    The results suggested that from around
    3.3 to 1.8 million years ago — when
    australopiths and earliest Homo species
    were around — stone tool manufacturing
    sequences remained within the range of
    the baselines (1 to 6 PUs). From around
    1.8 million to 600,000 years ago,
    manufacturing sequences began to overlap
    with and slightly exceed the complexity
    baseline (4 to 7 PUs). But, after around
    600,000 years ago, the complexity of
    manufacturing sequences rapidly increased
    (5 to 18 PUs).

    “By 600,000 years ago or so, hominin
    populations started relying on unusually
    complex technologies, and we only see rapid
    increases in complexity after that time as
    well. Both of those findings match what we
    expect to see among hominins who rely on
    cumulative culture,” said Paige, a
    postdoctoral researcher at the University
    of Missouri and an ASU PhD graduate.

    Tool-assisted foraging may have been the
    impetus for the earliest beginning of the
    evolution of cumulative culture. Early
    hominins, 3.4 to 2 million years ago,
    likely relied on foraging strategies that
    require tools — like accessing meat, marrow
    and organs — leading to changes in brain
    size, lifespan and biology that set the
    stage for cumulative culture.
    ...


    https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2319175121
    3.3 million years of stone tool complexity
    suggests that cumulative culture began
    during the Middle Pleistocene


    Significance
    Our species, Homo sapiens, occupies a
    uniquely diverse set of ecological
    habitats. Humans expanded into tropical
    forests and arctic tundra through
    cumulative culture. Cumulative culture
    is the accumulation of modifications,
    innovations, and improvements over
    generations through social learning.
    Generations of variant accumulations
    allow humans to use technologies and
    know-how well beyond what a single
    naive individual could invent
    independently within their lifetime.
    We analyzed the stone tools made
    during the last 3.3 My. We found that
    these stone tools remained simple until
    about 600,000 B.P. After that point,
    stone tools rapidly increased in
    complexity. Consistent with findings
    from other research teams, we suggest
    that this transition signals the
    development of cumulative culture in
    the human lineage.


    Abstract
    Cumulative culture, the accumulation of
    modifications, innovations, and
    improvements over generations through
    social learning, is a key determinant
    of the behavioral diversity across Homo
    sapiens populations and their ability
    to adapt to varied ecological habitats.
    Generations of improvements,
    modifications, and lucky errors allow
    humans to use technologies and know-how
    well beyond what a single naive
    individual could invent independently
    within their lifetime. The human
    dependence on cumulative culture may
    have shaped the evolution of biological
    and behavioral traits in the hominin
    lineage, including brain size, body
    size, life history, sociality,
    subsistence, and ecological niche
    expansion. Yet, we do not know when, in
    the human career, our ancestors began to
    depend on cumulative culture. Here, we
    show that hominins likely relied on a
    derived form of cumulative culture by
    at least ~600 kya, a result in line
    with a growing body of existing
    evidence. We analyzed the complexity
    of stone tool manufacturing sequences
    over the last 3.3 My of the
    archaeological record. We then compare
    these to the achievable complexity
    without cumulative culture, which we
    estimate using nonhuman primate
    technologies and stone tool
    manufacturing experiments. We find
    that archaeological technologies
    become significantly more complex
    than expected in the absence of
    cumulative culture only after
    ~600 kya.


    Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times more, 600 kya.
    Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but 500 times more 450 kya.
    But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well, science will
    wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence, stupid science.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Fri Jun 21 13:59:26 2024
    On 21.6.2024. 13:28, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 20.6.2024. 15:52, JTEM wrote:
      Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times more, >>> 600 kya. Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but 500 times
    more 450 kya.
             But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well,
    science will wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence, stupid
    science.

    I don't see any point to your dating but, I will say that the
    problem is worse than you let on. Science very often avoids
    facts that might upset it's preferred answers.

    If you think about, how common is a headline claiming that THIS
    fact or THAT new evidence "Rewrites the history of...????"

    There's no way I could count all the times I've seen such a
    headline, they are so common.

    Yet, the exact same ridiculous Out of Africa purity claims
    persists.

    No matter how many times the human evolution gets "Rewritten"
    by some new evidence, it stays exactly the same.

    And THAT, dear fellow, is a religion and NOT science.

            I absolutely agree (actually, I addressed a part of this problem in previous post). So, not only that they are playing games, but
    this game isn't about understanding our past, but about building a
    career. So, any new find cannot be in a way of good scientific career.
    So, on one hand you have the facts that give us window into our past,
    and on the other hand you have a guy (researching those facts) who very
    much cares that no new fact disturbs his peace. So, twisting and
    adjusting is actually his real job, how to twist new facts so that they
    fit into guy's undisturbed career. "Peace and love, man.", new facts
    only bring destruction, those scientists are actually afraid of any new
    fact, instead of eagerly awaiting on it.

    Oh yes, there is an excellent example, Cro-Magnons. They look exactly
    like Neanderthals, but they have chin, so, per standard view they *have
    to be* H.sapiens. See the citation from Wikipedia: "Cro-Magnons were anatomically similar to present-day Europeans, West Asians, and North
    Africans; but were more robust, having larger brains, broader faces,
    more prominent brow ridges, and bigger teeth, compared to the
    present-day average. The earliest Cro-Magnon specimens also exhibit some features that are reminiscent of those found in Neanderthals." But
    Neanderthals *were* "more robust, having larger brains, broader faces,
    more prominent brow ridges, and bigger teeth, compared to the
    present-day average.". So, the guy actually said that they are
    Neanderthals, plus they "exhibit some features that are reminiscent of
    those found in Neanderthals.". But hey, they *must* be H.sapiens, they
    cannot be Neanderthals, lol.
    So, you have a ton of facts which tie Cro-Magnons to Neanderthals, and
    you have one fact (chin) that ties Cro-magnons to H.sapiens, and guess
    which fact is more important than everything else. And somebody say that
    this is the proper way, that this is science. No, this is BS.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Fri Jun 21 13:28:30 2024
    On 20.6.2024. 15:52, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times more, 600
    kya. Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but 500 times more
    450 kya.
             But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well,
    science will wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence, stupid
    science.

    I don't see any point to your dating but, I will say that the
    problem is worse than you let on. Science very often avoids
    facts that might upset it's preferred answers.

    If you think about, how common is a headline claiming that THIS
    fact or THAT new evidence "Rewrites the history of...????"

    There's no way I could count all the times I've seen such a
    headline, they are so common.

    Yet, the exact same ridiculous Out of Africa purity claims
    persists.

    No matter how many times the human evolution gets "Rewritten"
    by some new evidence, it stays exactly the same.

    And THAT, dear fellow, is a religion and NOT science.

    I absolutely agree (actually, I addressed a part of this problem in
    previous post). So, not only that they are playing games, but this game
    isn't about understanding our past, but about building a career. So, any
    new find cannot be in a way of good scientific career. So, on one hand
    you have the facts that give us window into our past, and on the other
    hand you have a guy (researching those facts) who very much cares that
    no new fact disturbs his peace. So, twisting and adjusting is actually
    his real job, how to twist new facts so that they fit into guy's
    undisturbed career. "Peace and love, man.", new facts only bring
    destruction, those scientists are actually afraid of any new fact,
    instead of eagerly awaiting on it.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Fri Jun 21 13:19:12 2024
    On 20.6.2024. 15:47, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Science, with its stupid rules, only hinders human
    understanding, stupid science.

    You're right. Science isn't about understanding. It's kind of
    like learning a computer language in that often times things
    just can't make sense to you and you've got to accept it!

    Instead of figuring out WHY they do things that way, just accept
    that it is the way they are done...

    And THAT is science. Because science is about what is fact, what
    is real and NOT what we understand.

    Like, somebody deliberately demand that accepted view meet all the
    strict criteria, so that it never moves forward.

    The way I see it is that there's "Facts" (or "data" or even
    "evidence") and then there's "Models."

    It's one reason why I am so solidly in the Aquatic Ape corner of
    the arguments. Aquatic Ape has a model. In fact, there are a
    number of Aquatic Ape models. But savanna idiocy has nothing. Just
    the opposite; much of the "evidence" that's supposed to support
    savanna idiocy breaks any model they hope to fit it into.

    My my mind, the "Model" is understanding. It's making sense of
    the evidence, the data.

    Models can be "Theories," but then they have to meet the criteria
    of science and be testable...

    Nobody understands anything.

    Homo existed for millions of years without anyone understand
    what the moon is, much less "How" or "Why" it's there. But the
    moon was there.

    People invented myths, legends, folklore even religions to
    explain it all, grant them "Understanding." And it was always
    wrong yet the moon was still there.

    The one who doesn't understand, the bigger the knowledge he has, the
    more chance that he will look at the wrong direction. Because he is
    unable to understand, studying isn't everything.

    You're right in that so long as people concentrate on the details
    they tend to miss the larger picture... the "larger picture" being
    the model.

    You can't discard facts or make some up in order to fit a model.

    But this isn't a question of discarding the facts, I do *accept* all
    the facts. There is one fact that science doesn't take into
    consideration, and this is that proven facts aren't the only facts that
    ever existed. Humans existed in the times between fossil finds, they
    didn't appear in the time of one fossil, disappear, then appear out of
    nothing in the time of another fossil. But science acts like only the
    proven facts are the facts that ever existed, and anythings else simply
    isn't accepted by science until it can be proved. But that way science
    only proves that it was wrong whole the time, because it didn't accept
    the facts that later proved to be true, so it was wrong from the very beginning. The shocking thing is that it continues to be wrong,
    willingly, presuming that the new find will prove that this new find
    wasn't accepted by science before it was found.
    I mean, those scientists behave like they are children playing some
    game, and they play the game by set rules. Well, surprise, surprise,
    this *isn't* a childish game, this is supposed to be a serious,
    grown-up, thing, where responsible grown-ups contemplate our past, and
    not play games.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Sat Jun 22 21:48:22 2024
    On 21.6.2024. 22:19, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Oh yes, there is an excellent example, Cro-Magnons. They look
    exactly like Neanderthals, but they have chin, so, per standard view
    they *have to be* H.sapiens.

    I don't think anyone denies the fact that they were H. sapiens, and
    Wolpoff detailed how they were Out-of-Africa (middle east?) Hs that
    interbred with and slowly evolved towards Neaderthals.

    Over time their skulls became more and more "Modern," more and more Neanderthal like.

    Interbreeding.

    The answer REAL paleo anthropologists came up with more than 50
    years ago was that so called moderns arose in the middle east, more
    or less a hybrid, resting there at the border of three continents,
    and then spread out from there.

    I have long argued (pointed out) that the Out of Africa population
    was a Eurasian population that migrated into Africa in the first
    place...

    There were numerous bottlenecks not just one.

             So, you have a ton of facts which tie Cro-Magnons to
    Neanderthals, and you have one fact (chin) that ties Cro-magnons to
    H.sapiens, and guess which fact is more important than everything
    else. And somebody say that this is the proper way, that this is
    science. No, this is BS.

    I like stating the bleeding obvious:

    If aliens landed here, never saw any of the evidence, never so much
    as looked, what they would expect to see is that, over time, a lot
    of very different population converged over time. That, there'd be
    a convergence of traits. And that it exactly what we see.

    The planet was HUGE, the populations were small -- tiny, even
    minuscule by modern standards -- and this bred diverge. But, over
    time, as groups came into more and more contact with outsiders, with
    more and more genetic influx, the divergence would turn into
    convergence.

    In the past I referred to this formula for human evolution the
    "Distributive Computing" model.

    There are few things in what you are saying that don't hold water.
    First, you said that Cro-magnons became more and more like Neanderthals
    over time. No, the first Cro-magnons were like Neanderthals, and over
    time they became more and more like humans.
    The second thing, humans were the kings of the World, for, like, 15
    my. This is per my view. Per standard view, with their stone tools, they
    should be the kings for 3 my. They weren't in small numbers, they were
    very numerous, this is a stupid misconception, which wants to put
    civilization at the top. They say all the time that the average lifespan
    was something like 40 years, and wherever I see some prominent people
    from the past, they lived for much longer. No, it isn't us, who work 8
    hours a day, and sleep 7 hours that are the ideal, it is a slave in
    Roman Empire, who worked for 4 hours a day, and slept 12 hours a day,
    that is the ideal. They used to say that it was better to be a slave in
    Athens than a king in some remote island. Today we are working our shit
    off, because we are in a global competition for much larger production.
    Just hundred years ago Americans, on their farms, didn't work a quarter
    of the time we are working today.
    No, in the past people lived long and satisfying life, it is in today's world that people are suffering, they are lying to you all the
    time. Because they want you, your spouse, and your dog to work your shit
    off.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Sun Jun 23 09:32:24 2024
    On 22.6.2024. 21:48, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 21.6.2024. 22:19, JTEM wrote:
      Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Oh yes, there is an excellent example, Cro-Magnons. They >>> look exactly like Neanderthals, but they have chin, so, per standard
    view they *have to be* H.sapiens.

    I don't think anyone denies the fact that they were H. sapiens, and
    Wolpoff detailed how they were Out-of-Africa (middle east?) Hs that
    interbred with and slowly evolved towards Neaderthals.

    Over time their skulls became more and more "Modern," more and more
    Neanderthal like.

    Interbreeding.

    The answer REAL paleo anthropologists came up with more than 50
    years ago was that so called moderns arose in the middle east, more
    or less a hybrid, resting there at the border of three continents,
    and then spread out from there.

    I have long argued (pointed out) that the Out of Africa population
    was a Eurasian population that migrated into Africa in the first
    place...

    There were numerous bottlenecks not just one.

             So, you have a ton of facts which tie Cro-Magnons to
    Neanderthals, and you have one fact (chin) that ties Cro-magnons to
    H.sapiens, and guess which fact is more important than everything
    else. And somebody say that this is the proper way, that this is
    science. No, this is BS.

    I like stating the bleeding obvious:

    If aliens landed here, never saw any of the evidence, never so much
    as looked, what they would expect to see is that, over time, a lot
    of very different population converged over time. That, there'd be
    a convergence of traits. And that it exactly what we see.

    The planet was HUGE, the populations were small -- tiny, even
    minuscule by modern standards -- and this bred diverge. But, over
    time, as groups came into more and more contact with outsiders, with
    more and more genetic influx, the divergence would turn into
    convergence.

    In the past I referred to this formula for human evolution the
    "Distributive Computing" model.

            There are few things in what you are saying that don't hold water. First, you said that Cro-magnons became more and more like Neanderthals over time. No, the first Cro-magnons were like
    Neanderthals, and over time they became more and more like humans.
            The second thing, humans were the kings of the World, for, like, 15 my. This is per my view. Per standard view, with their stone
    tools, they should be the kings for 3 my. They weren't in small numbers,
    they were very numerous, this is a stupid misconception, which wants to
    put civilization at the top. They say all the time that the average
    lifespan was something like 40 years, and wherever I see some prominent people from the past, they lived for much longer. No, it isn't us, who
    work 8 hours a day, and sleep 7 hours that are the ideal, it is a slave
    in Roman Empire, who worked for 4 hours a day, and slept 12 hours a day,
    that is the ideal. They used to say that it was better to be a slave in Athens than a king in some remote island. Today we are working our shit
    off, because we are in a global competition for much larger production.
    Just hundred years ago Americans, on their farms, didn't work a quarter
    of the time we are working today.
            No, in the past people lived long and satisfying life, it is in
    today's world that people are suffering, they are lying to you all the
    time. Because they want you, your spouse, and your dog to work your shit
    off.

    We are the most successful species of them all, and by far. If their
    models say that we all should, actually, starve to death (before we got enlightened, and understand God, lol), it doesn't mean that we did, it
    just means that their models are a bunch of BS.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Primum Sapienti@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Sun Jun 23 22:37:19 2024
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 20.6.2024. 3:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 19.6.2024. 6:40, Primum Sapienti wrote:

    https://news.asu.edu/20240617-science-and-technology-asu-study-points-origin-cumulative-culture-human-evolution
    YUou


             Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times more, 600
    kya. Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but 500 times more
    450 kya.
             But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well,
    science will wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence, stupid
    science.

            Science, with its stupid rules, only hinders human understanding, stupid science. Like, somebody deliberately demand that accepted view meet all the strict criteria, so that it never moves
    forward. Nobody understands anything. They were studying so hard, they accumulated so large knowledge, yet, they completely lack in
    understanding, because studying *isn't* understanding. The one who
    doesn't understand, the bigger the knowledge he has, the more chance
    that he will look at the wrong direction. Because he is unable to
    understand, studying isn't everything.

    You don't want to make the mistake of the
    Aquatic SimianS of staring off into space
    and imagining how something was. Concrete
    evidence is indeed critical whatever field
    of science is involved. Would you want to
    take a medicine that wasn't rigoursly
    developed?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Primum Sapienti on Mon Jun 24 23:24:29 2024
    On 24.6.2024. 6:37, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 20.6.2024. 3:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 19.6.2024. 6:40, Primum Sapienti wrote:

    https://news.asu.edu/20240617-science-and-technology-asu-study-points-origin-cumulative-culture-human-evolution
    YUou


             Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times more, >>> 600 kya. Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but 500 times
    more 450 kya.
             But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well,
    science will wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence, stupid
    science.

             Science, with its stupid rules, only hinders human
    understanding, stupid science. Like, somebody deliberately demand that
    accepted view meet all the strict criteria, so that it never moves
    forward. Nobody understands anything. They were studying so hard, they
    accumulated so large knowledge, yet, they completely lack in
    understanding, because studying *isn't* understanding. The one who
    doesn't understand, the bigger the knowledge he has, the more chance
    that he will look at the wrong direction. Because he is unable to
    understand, studying isn't everything.

    You don't want to make the mistake of the
    Aquatic SimianS of staring off into space
    and imagining how something was. Concrete
    evidence is indeed critical whatever field
    of science is involved. Would you want to
    take a medicine that wasn't rigoursly
    developed?

    I wouldn't want to take a medicine at all, my body should be fit
    enough to keep itself alive. Medicine, how much good it is, cannot
    replace this. It is like asking me, would you like to run on your own
    legs, or would you like to replace them with very rigorously developed prosthesis.
    Your view on this is like, would you like to think with your brain, or
    would you like to think with your eyes. I am using eyes for looking, and
    brain for thinking. You see an evidence, and for you this is what? Why
    don't you use your brain? Why your brain is on idle? Should it be on
    idle? Somebody told you not to use your brain, and you gladly complied.
    I will never comply with this.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Mon Jun 24 23:56:21 2024
    On 24.6.2024. 23:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 24.6.2024. 6:37, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 20.6.2024. 3:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 19.6.2024. 6:40, Primum Sapienti wrote:

    https://news.asu.edu/20240617-science-and-technology-asu-study-points-origin-cumulative-culture-human-evolution
    YUou


             Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times more, >>>> 600 kya. Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but 500 times
    more 450 kya.
             But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well, >>>> science will wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence, stupid
    science.

             Science, with its stupid rules, only hinders human
    understanding, stupid science. Like, somebody deliberately demand
    that accepted view meet all the strict criteria, so that it never
    moves forward. Nobody understands anything. They were studying so
    hard, they accumulated so large knowledge, yet, they completely lack
    in understanding, because studying *isn't* understanding. The one who
    doesn't understand, the bigger the knowledge he has, the more chance
    that he will look at the wrong direction. Because he is unable to
    understand, studying isn't everything.

    You don't want to make the mistake of the
    Aquatic SimianS of staring off into space
    and imagining how something was. Concrete
    evidence is indeed critical whatever field
    of science is involved. Would you want to
    take a medicine that wasn't rigoursly
    developed?

            I wouldn't want to take a medicine at all, my body should be fit enough to keep itself alive. Medicine, how much good it is, cannot replace this. It is like asking me, would you like to run on your own
    legs, or would you like to replace them with very rigorously developed prosthesis.
            Your view on this is like, would you like to think with your brain, or would you like to think with your eyes. I am using eyes for looking, and brain for thinking. You see an evidence, and for you this
    is what? Why don't you use your brain? Why your brain is on idle? Should
    it be on idle? Somebody told you not to use your brain, and you gladly complied. I will never comply with this.

    I will tell you about my experience with medicine. Once I was involved
    in road accident, my leg almost broke, but it didn't, only my muscles
    got squeezed a lot, and I was incapable to walk freely for two months,
    which means that I didn't go to work for two months (it is allowed and
    paid for in my country). My doctor put some medicine on the leg, and I
    asked him (sarcastically), if he wouldn't do that would I die? He just
    smiled at me, of course I wouldn't, his medicine just quickens my
    healing, so that I can go to work sooner. The down side, of course, is
    that this confuses my body's healing mechanism, so my organism becomes
    less and less capable to heal itself.
    The other case, when I was a kid, once I was really ill, with really
    high temperature. Of course, my mother did what she needs, wrapped me
    well. But the temperature becomes too high, and I knew that now it is
    time to cool me off. But my mother didn't now this yet, and I was afraid
    to tell her, because I thought that elders are smart enough to know how
    it is done. When my mother realized (by measuring my temperature) that I
    am too hot, it was almost too late. I should have told her to cool me
    off when I felt it is time for that. See, I have to have the feeling for
    it, all your "rigorously" developed things are not good enough. Just
    like your science *isn't* good enough. It will never work, it will never
    make you understand, you have to start to use your brain.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Tue Jun 25 14:50:26 2024
    On 24.6.2024. 23:56, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 24.6.2024. 23:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 24.6.2024. 6:37, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 20.6.2024. 3:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 19.6.2024. 6:40, Primum Sapienti wrote:

    https://news.asu.edu/20240617-science-and-technology-asu-study-points-origin-cumulative-culture-human-evolution
    YUou


             Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times more,
    600 kya. Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but 500 times
    more 450 kya.
             But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well, >>>>> science will wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence, stupid
    science.

             Science, with its stupid rules, only hinders human
    understanding, stupid science. Like, somebody deliberately demand
    that accepted view meet all the strict criteria, so that it never
    moves forward. Nobody understands anything. They were studying so
    hard, they accumulated so large knowledge, yet, they completely lack
    in understanding, because studying *isn't* understanding. The one
    who doesn't understand, the bigger the knowledge he has, the more
    chance that he will look at the wrong direction. Because he is
    unable to understand, studying isn't everything.

    You don't want to make the mistake of the
    Aquatic SimianS of staring off into space
    and imagining how something was. Concrete
    evidence is indeed critical whatever field
    of science is involved. Would you want to
    take a medicine that wasn't rigoursly
    developed?

             I wouldn't want to take a medicine at all, my body should be
    fit enough to keep itself alive. Medicine, how much good it is, cannot
    replace this. It is like asking me, would you like to run on your own
    legs, or would you like to replace them with very rigorously developed
    prosthesis.
             Your view on this is like, would you like to think with your
    brain, or would you like to think with your eyes. I am using eyes for
    looking, and brain for thinking. You see an evidence, and for you this
    is what? Why don't you use your brain? Why your brain is on idle?
    Should it be on idle? Somebody told you not to use your brain, and you
    gladly complied. I will never comply with this.

            I will tell you about my experience with medicine. Once I was involved in road accident, my leg almost broke, but it didn't, only my muscles got squeezed a lot, and I was incapable to walk freely for two months, which means that I didn't go to work for two months (it is
    allowed and paid for in my country). My doctor put some medicine on the
    leg, and I asked him (sarcastically), if he wouldn't do that would I
    die? He just smiled at me, of course I wouldn't, his medicine just
    quickens my healing, so that I can go to work sooner. The down side, of course, is that this confuses my body's healing mechanism, so my
    organism becomes less and less capable to heal itself.
            The other case, when I was a kid, once I was really ill, with really high temperature. Of course, my mother did what she needs,
    wrapped me well. But the temperature becomes too high, and I knew that
    now it is time to cool me off. But my mother didn't now this yet, and I
    was afraid to tell her, because I thought that elders are smart enough
    to know how it is done. When my mother realized (by measuring my
    temperature) that I am too hot, it was almost too late. I should have
    told her to cool me off when I felt it is time for that. See, I have to
    have the feeling for it, all your "rigorously" developed things are not
    good enough. Just like your science *isn't* good enough. It will never
    work, it will never make you understand, you have to start to use your
    brain.

    Maybe it would be a good thing to warn people about communist type
    health care. You noticed that in my country health care is paid for.
    Well, nothing is free, they, actually, take my money, and give it to government, then government pays the doctor (not enough, this is why he
    is very dissatisfied). Anyway, he gets his wage from government, not
    from me. I noticed several times that he doesn't care at all about my well-being, but he gets very agitated, alerted, when he notices that
    something is happening against the well-being of government, and he
    wants to prevent that under any coast, even if it is against my
    well-being. In other words, he takes care of my health the way
    veterinarian takes care about the health of working cattle, not for my
    sake, but for the sake of the boss.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Thu Jun 27 01:06:51 2024
    On 26.6.2024. 3:38, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             There are few things in what you are saying that don't hold >> water. First, you said that Cro-magnons became more and more like
    Neanderthals over time. No, the first Cro-magnons were like
    Neanderthals, and over time they became more and more like humans.

    Wow. Back up.

    Yes I misspoke but you're misspeaking even worse!

    We established here -- you & I agree -- Cro magnons were modern
    humans. All I did was reverse them, which is common enough,
    equating so called "Moderns" with cro magnons.

        ...all Europeans today are human, not all humans are European.

    Get it?

    Neanderthals were humans, cro magnon were humans... no exceptions.

    Cro magnons didn't start out like Neanderthals. Neanderthals
    started out like Neanderthals and interbred with so called "Moderns"
    entering from the east, it appears.

    Physical forms CONVERGED over time, yes.

    Well, things aren't so simple. Unfortunately, all the conclusions here
    are derived, not direct. First, I do think that Cro-Magnons started as Neanderthals, so Cro-Magnons *are* Neanderthals. The link towards other
    humans is less clear. They say that the first Cro-Magnons look very much
    like Neanderthals, and that later Cro-Magnons lean more towards humans.
    But, in general they say that Cro-Magnons went extinct, just like
    Neanderthals. Now, I don't thin that they went extinct, I do think that Cro-Magnons are Europeans, but only because of a single reason, because
    of skin color, Europeans are white, and I presume that you can be white
    only if you lived in Europe during the times of Neanderthals. So, all conclusions are derived, but I believe that they are true.
    The second thing, I will never understand why Asians aren't considered
    different species than Caucasians. If we would be animals, scientists
    would definitely diverge those two into two different species. Asians
    have round heads, different eyes (and the difference in teeth, I
    presume), flat bottom and bosoms, thin legs spread apart, they are
    smaller. I.e., a lot of very unique characteristics.
    I do believe that Europeans and Africans interbred a lot, because
    Europeans needed to go south during Ice Ages. They also did the same
    with Indians. But, I do believe that Asians are completely different
    breed. Of course, Asians also interbred with Europeans, in my
    surroundings I see a lot of faces with Asian characteristics, more
    rounded, but never the less I do believe that the bulk of those two
    remained separated. So, we basically have two bulks, two piles of
    humans, western and eastern.

             The second thing, humans were the kings of the World, for, >> like, 15 my.

    Well. No.

    Humans = Homo

    And Homo just plain ain't that old!

    But the good Doctor agrees with you, even take things further, placing
    the divergence around 20 million years.

    He may be right, and that places you into the same ballpark as him.

    For me it hinges on bipedalism; when did it begin?

    I'd say around 9 million years ago for certain, probably at least 10
    million years ago while the good Doctor says more like 20...

    I don't know who is the "Good Doctor". I see the name of TV Serial
    "Good Doctor", but I don't watch TV. If "Good Doctor" is Marc Verhaegen,
    then he changed his stance a lot. What is my position? The divergence
    between Chimps and humans can be sometime 20 mya, or earlier.
    Bipedalism? Earlier than 15 mya, for sure. Bipedal human ancestors where probably the cause of temperature shift which started 15 mya. Of course,
    those weren't Homo yet. If we would associate stone tools with the Homo (Kenyantropus Platyops), then Homo is 3.5 my old. Of course, if you
    account Kenyantropus as ancestor of Homo (which I would), then Homo is
    younger than that.

    This is per my view. Per standard view, with their stone tools, they
    should be the kings for 3 my. They weren't in small numbers, they were
    very numerous, this is a stupid misconception, which wants to put
    civilization at the top. They say all the time that the average
    lifespan was something like 40 years, and wherever I see some
    prominent people from the past, they lived for much longer.

    You're confusing "Life Expectancy" with "Life span."

    Typical Roman wasn't rich, wasn't an emperor or Senator and died in his
    30s. If you could timetravel back to the 1st century, kidnap some
    Roman infants and bring them forward to the modern world, they'd fare
    a great deal better. Differences in prenatal care and the diet of their mothers would likely show in their health but, accounting for that,
    they'd do way better than a typical infant back in 1st century Rome and
    about as well as any modern baby.

    But here's the point:  You'd have to look for, identify and remove from
    your statistics anyone with horrible prenatal care and/or an improperly nourished mother, to arrive at a modern looking "Life Expectancy."

    The ancient had the same POTENTIAL lifetimes as we moderns, but they
    lacked our knowledge, they often lacked a proper diet and they certainly lacked our medicines.

    Not at all. First, I do understand the difference between life span
    and life expectancy, and I deliberately chose to use life span. Why?
    Because I do think that whoever is using the term life span in the
    standard way (this means, all the scientists) is an idiot, and that it
    should bee used in the meaning of life expectancy. Why, in the whole
    world, would somebody even account for babies which died out of child
    diseases, or for somebody died in battle, this is stupid. Your remark is
    valid, I am just protesting against the standard stance which talks
    about life span at all, just to emphasize the better position of today's societies. This is counter productive and stupid. So, ok, life
    expectancy, but I will use "life span" again and again, in a protest mode.
    Further, Roman soldiers got retired after 25 years of service. Just
    yesterday I heard that this is also the retirement years of service in
    Serbian Army today. So, where is the difference? If I didn't
    misinterpret something, in the US Army it is 20 years. Mind you, a lot
    of Roman soldiers didn't do service continuously. So, they would be
    pretty old when they would retire. I mean, what's the point in
    determining that, if all the people would be dead by that time? No, this
    all is a lie.
    The second thing, I was born in a city, biggish city, like 800 k
    people. When I was kid there was some farmer from surrounding villages,
    selling some cream, door to door. My god, this cream was so delicious,
    no factory cream can come even close to that. And this goes with all the
    other food. Do you really think that today's food, with all those
    additives, is better than the food from the past? Boy, how wrong you
    are. What we are eating today is pure garbage compared to what they were
    eating in the past.
    The difference, of course, is those child diseases, which killed a lot
    of children. If you ask me, those who survived were strong men. Today
    everybody survives, do you really think that this is better? No, that
    way humans become weaker and weaker with every new generation.
    Do you really think that all those 90 year old human zombies, whom
    doctors, with all their medical techniques, just prevent from dying,
    account for a better life? Not at all.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Thu Jun 27 01:43:12 2024
    On 27.6.2024. 1:06, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
            The second thing, I will never understand why Asians aren't considered different species than Caucasians. If we would be animals, scientists would definitely diverge those two into two different
    species. Asians have round heads, different eyes (and the difference in teeth, I presume), flat bottom and bosoms, thin legs spread apart, they
    are smaller. I.e., a lot of very unique characteristics.

    Actually, I must correct myself here, I do know why they don't separate those into different species. First, I must emphasize here that virtually every part of our body is different (I can also add that our languages sound completely different, and I would presume that we
    separated few million years ago, only on the difference of how we
    speak). But, the standard view is that Homo sapiens, as a whole, is
    different from other animals, because it has intelligence, and that only
    one individual became "spiritual" for who knows which reason, sometime
    300 kya, and by "spiritual", they say that we are intellectually far
    above all the other animals, so we all must be a single species, which possesses this very unique (in the Universe) characteristics of
    "intelligence, spirituality, and so on", so all the humans have to be
    the descendants of this particular "spiritual" individual. Of course,
    this all is pure BS, but hey, people are stupid (not intelligent), so
    they accept pure BSs with the delight. That's the way it is, what can
    you do.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Thu Jun 27 15:25:53 2024
    On 27.6.2024. 7:44, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Well, things aren't so simple. Unfortunately, all the
    conclusions here are derived, not direct. First, I do think that
    Cro-Magnons started as Neanderthals, so Cro-Magnons *are* Neanderthals.

    There is a school of thought that says -- and has says, going back
    at least 50 years -- that so called "Moderns" evolved from a
    Neanderthal population in the middle east.

    That's too linear for me. I like to think of it as hybridization.
    That, being in the middle east -- the crossroads to three
    continents plus the Indian sub continent -- a population in the
    middle east was exposed to & acquired adaptations which brought
    them in line with the current (inaccurate) concept of "Modern"
    humans.

    In my view "Moderns" are erectus/Neanderthals plus chin and high
    forehead (globular brain). This is a consequence of massive usage of
    hematite. Massive usage of hematite is where you have developed
    societies, with a lot of people, with trading routes, with cereals. This
    cannot be Neanderthal, this can be Africa or India. Massive usage of
    hematite spread from there.

    The link towards other humans is less clear.

    The link is Aquatic Ape.

    Not at all, people weren't aquatic anymore for a long time by then.

    They say that the first Cro-Magnons look very much like Neanderthals,
    and that later Cro-Magnons lean more towards humans. But, in general
    they say that Cro-Magnons went extinct, just like Neanderthals. Now, I
    don't thin that they went extinct, I do think that Cro-Magnons are
    Europeans, but only because of a single reason, because of skin color,
    Europeans are white, and I presume that you can be white only if you
    lived in Europe during the times of Neanderthals. So, all conclusions
    are derived, but I believe that they are true.

    #1.  The African population in Out of Africa purity was a Eurasian group that migrated into Africa.

    Nobody migrated anywhere. It is the chin and globular brain (usage of
    hematite) that spread. It is like if you would say that people migrated
    out of America because the cell phone usage spread out of America. No,
    people didn't migrate, it is just that people all around the world
    acquired the usage of cell phone.

    #2.  They were sexually selected. If not at first then certainly by the
    time of Toba, or in response to Toba.

    #3.  Neanderthals were NOT sexually selected.

    #4.  Neanderthals would have required millennia to "Evolve" white skin,
    as they weren't sexually selected thus wouldn't "Select" for white skin.

    #5.  The sexually selected African population COULD and maybe even DID select for white skin, as it is a neonatal trait, but it would have been
    auto selected AGAINST in life as a light skin person in Africa, without
    skin protection, is burnt toast.

    During population bottlenecks like Toba, and Campi Flegrei would have
    been the more important one here, sexually selected groups would have recovered the quickest, poured into the vacuums left by the bottle
    neck & interbred with the Neanderthals.

    BS. Animals, and people, are selected. Claiming that you know the
    method and reason of selection has more with religion than with the real knowledge. Maybe people were selected for their stupidity, because civilization, living in large groups, prefers people to be like sheep,
    and not to be individuals. Your insisting on "bottlenecks" also is
    pretty religious.

             The second thing, I will never understand why Asians aren't >> considered different species than Caucasians. If we would be animals,
    scientists would definitely diverge those two into two different
    species. Asians have round heads, different eyes (and the difference
    in teeth, I presume), flat bottom and bosoms, thin legs spread apart,
    they are smaller. I.e., a lot of very unique characteristics.

    Dogs are all one species.

    Baboons aren't. Dogs are one species solely because they all are human
    accompaniments. If they would be judged by their looks, they would all
    be different species.

             I do believe that Europeans and Africans interbred a lot, >> because Europeans needed to go south during Ice Ages. They also did
    the same with Indians. But, I do believe that Asians are completely
    different breed. Of course, Asians also interbred with Europeans, in
    my surroundings I see a lot of faces with Asian characteristics, more
    rounded, but never the less I do believe that the bulk of those two
    remained separated. So, we basically have two bulks, two piles of
    humans, western and eastern.

    What you're noting is Multi Regionalism or Regional Continuity.

    Ah, thanks. Good.

    For me it hinges on bipedalism; when did it begin?

    I'd say around 9 million years ago for certain, probably at least 10
    million years ago while the good Doctor says more like 20...

             I don't know who is the "Good Doctor".

    Yes you do.

    What is my position? The divergence between Chimps and humans can be
    sometime 20 mya, or earlier.

    Absolutely positively no way.

    It was very recent. Probably less than 4 million years ago.

    Bipedalism? Earlier than 15 mya, for sure. Bipedal human ancestors
    where probably the cause of temperature shift which started 15 mya.

    Beyond Milankovitch cycles, there's always plate tectonics:

    https://youtu.be/OGdPqpzYD4o?feature=shared&t=59

    There's nothing missing.

    First, plate tectonics is driven by cracks made by asteroid impacts.
    The model science is using for plate tectonics doesn't take those into
    account. This is why their model is so simple, so that everything ends
    up in a single continent. This is stupid. The characteristics of a bad
    theory, or a bad programming, or anything bad, is that in the end
    everything, either collapses, or explodes.
    Milankovitch cycles have nothing to do with long term changes, they
    have something to do with fluctuations, because they reflect the changes
    in Earth orbit around the Sun, this is why they are "cycles", they are
    cyclic. I am talking about permanent changes. 15 mya Earth started to
    cool off. This is because of deforestation (not because of Milankoitch,
    or Earth orbit), which allowed for greater albedo, Earth started to lose
    heat because of greater albedo.

             Not at all. First, I do understand the difference between >> life span and life expectancy, and I deliberately chose to use life
    span. Why? Because I do think that whoever is using the term life span
    in the standard way (this means, all the scientists) is an idiot, and
    that it should bee used in the meaning of life expectancy. Why, in the
    whole world, would somebody even account for babies which died out of
    child diseases, or for somebody died in battle, this is stupid. Your
    remark is valid, I am just protesting against the standard stance
    which talks about life span at all, just to emphasize the better
    position of today's societies. This is counter productive and stupid.

    One very comprehensive but flawed study found that 75% of all babies
    born, the people were dead by their mid 40s. Another study found that
    it was flawed, taking their data from people who could afford their
    own burials. Most sources agree that a typical pleb died in their 30s,
    the ones that made it to adulthood, not their 40s. And infant mortality
    was above 50%.

    These people had the exact same CAPACITY to live into their old age
    as we modern people.

    In ancient Egypt, tooth decay was a major cause of death, at least
    amongst those who lived long enough. They used sand to grind their
    wheat so the grit in their food wore down their teeth... infection...

    death.

    Whisk yourself back in time, kidnap infant babies and rush them
    forward to the present. Unless they were exposed to abominable
    prenatal care/their mothers had horrendous diets, they could all
    be expected to live just as long as you.

             Further, Roman soldiers got retired after 25 years of service.

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38586918

    They estimate that 80% died before retirement.

    REMEMBER:  Roughly 75% of everyone born was already dead before
    they were old enough to enlist... half of all babies died and of
    those that lived half died by the age of 15.

    So 80% of 25% died, or a whopping 5% of all the potential solders
    born never lived long enough to retire... 75% died before they
    could even enlist.

    I don't believe this statistics at all. If you account one that lives
    to 60, and a baby that died the day it is born, the average is 30 years.
    It is so stupid to use the number 30 for anything (except for "proving"
    that we live longer today just because our babies, which should die,
    survive, we don't let them die). This example shows you how easy it is
    to manipulate those numbers.
    As I said, they worked much less, and ate much healthier food than us.
    This picture of hard work and bad diet is so wrong, and the data that
    proves it is probably extremely manipulated and twisted. I mean,
    catholic priests are the authors of all the scientific theories of
    Genesis. Scientists are idiots whom you can manipulate whichever way you
    want. I bet that all those scientists that regularly encounter long life
    span in the past, are simply afraid to talk about it, because it is
    counter what standard view is. When a guy numbered 24 chromosomes in
    humans, 30 years after that all the scientists copied that number,
    although they saw with their own eyes that there are only 23
    chromosomes. They were just afraid to write it down, because that way
    they would confront the authorities, and ruin their career. So, *all*
    the scientists blatantly lied for 30 years, there wasn't a single one
    who was honest. You were talking about sexual selection, this is a
    selection for dishonesty, for you.

    Just yesterday I heard that this is also the retirement years of
    service in Serbian Army today.

    You clearly have a huge emotional investment in this.

    Why?

    What does it mean *To You* if people died younger in the past?

    I am telling you, this view is so wrong, we work more and we are
    eating junk. I don't want to work more, and eat junk, I am not a working cattle, I am an intelligent and proud HUMAN, the king of animals for 15
    million years, not a slave.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Primum Sapienti@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Thu Jun 27 21:35:38 2024
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 24.6.2024. 23:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 24.6.2024. 6:37, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 20.6.2024. 3:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 19.6.2024. 6:40, Primum Sapienti wrote:

    https://news.asu.edu/20240617-science-and-technology-asu-study-points-origin-cumulative-culture-human-evolution

             Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times more,
    600 kya. Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but 500 times
    more 450 kya.
             But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well, >>>>> science will wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence, stupid
    science.

             Science, with its stupid rules, only hinders human
    understanding, stupid science. Like, somebody deliberately demand
    that accepted view meet all the strict criteria, so that it never
    moves forward. Nobody understands anything. They were studying so
    hard, they accumulated so large knowledge, yet, they completely lack
    in understanding, because studying *isn't* understanding. The one
    who doesn't understand, the bigger the knowledge he has, the more
    chance that he will look at the wrong direction. Because he is
    unable to understand, studying isn't everything.

    You don't want to make the mistake of the
    Aquatic SimianS of staring off into space
    and imagining how something was. Concrete
    evidence is indeed critical whatever field
    of science is involved. Would you want to
    take a medicine that wasn't rigoursly
    developed?

             I wouldn't want to take a medicine at all, my body should be
    fit enough to keep itself alive. Medicine, how much good it is, cannot
    replace this. It is like asking me, would you like to run on your own
    legs, or would you like to replace them with very rigorously developed
    prosthesis.
             Your view on this is like, would you like to think with your
    brain, or would you like to think with your eyes. I am using eyes for
    looking, and brain for thinking. You see an evidence, and for you this
    is what? Why don't you use your brain? Why your brain is on idle?
    Should it be on idle? Somebody told you not to use your brain, and you
    gladly complied. I will never comply with this.

            I will tell you about my experience with medicine. Once I was involved in road accident, my leg almost broke, but it didn't, only my muscles got squeezed a lot, and I was incapable to walk freely for two months, which means that I didn't go to work for two months (it is
    allowed and paid for in my country). My doctor put some medicine on the
    leg, and I asked him (sarcastically), if he wouldn't do that would I
    die? He just smiled at me, of course I wouldn't, his medicine just
    quickens my healing, so that I can go to work sooner. The down side, of course, is that this confuses my body's healing mechanism, so my
    organism becomes less and less capable to heal itself.
            The other case, when I was a kid, once I was really ill, with really high temperature. Of course, my mother did what she needs,
    wrapped me well. But the temperature becomes too high, and I knew that
    now it is time to cool me off. But my mother didn't now this yet, and I
    was afraid to tell her, because I thought that elders are smart enough
    to know how it is done. When my mother realized (by measuring my
    temperature) that I am too hot, it was almost too late. I should have
    told her to cool me off when I felt it is time for that. See, I have to
    have the feeling for it, all your "rigorously" developed things are not
    good enough. Just like your science *isn't* good enough. It will never
    work, it will never make you understand, you have to start to use your
    brain.

    You're a single data point. One of my neighbors
    had an organ transplant earlier this year. *NO*
    amount of self healing would have repaired
    what they had, only rigorous science saved them.
    They're now mowing their lawn and driving to the
    store and everything. There's another data point.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Primum Sapienti on Fri Jun 28 19:40:27 2024
    On 28.6.2024. 5:35, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 24.6.2024. 23:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 24.6.2024. 6:37, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 20.6.2024. 3:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 19.6.2024. 6:40, Primum Sapienti wrote:

    https://news.asu.edu/20240617-science-and-technology-asu-study-points-origin-cumulative-culture-human-evolution

             Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times more,
    600 kya. Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but 500
    times more 450 kya.
             But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well, >>>>>> science will wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence, stupid
    science.

             Science, with its stupid rules, only hinders human
    understanding, stupid science. Like, somebody deliberately demand
    that accepted view meet all the strict criteria, so that it never
    moves forward. Nobody understands anything. They were studying so
    hard, they accumulated so large knowledge, yet, they completely
    lack in understanding, because studying *isn't* understanding. The
    one who doesn't understand, the bigger the knowledge he has, the
    more chance that he will look at the wrong direction. Because he is
    unable to understand, studying isn't everything.

    You don't want to make the mistake of the
    Aquatic SimianS of staring off into space
    and imagining how something was. Concrete
    evidence is indeed critical whatever field
    of science is involved. Would you want to
    take a medicine that wasn't rigoursly
    developed?

             I wouldn't want to take a medicine at all, my body should be
    fit enough to keep itself alive. Medicine, how much good it is,
    cannot replace this. It is like asking me, would you like to run on
    your own legs, or would you like to replace them with very rigorously
    developed prosthesis.
             Your view on this is like, would you like to think with your
    brain, or would you like to think with your eyes. I am using eyes for
    looking, and brain for thinking. You see an evidence, and for you
    this is what? Why don't you use your brain? Why your brain is on
    idle? Should it be on idle? Somebody told you not to use your brain,
    and you gladly complied. I will never comply with this.

             I will tell you about my experience with medicine. Once I was
    involved in road accident, my leg almost broke, but it didn't, only my
    muscles got squeezed a lot, and I was incapable to walk freely for two
    months, which means that I didn't go to work for two months (it is
    allowed and paid for in my country). My doctor put some medicine on
    the leg, and I asked him (sarcastically), if he wouldn't do that would
    I die? He just smiled at me, of course I wouldn't, his medicine just
    quickens my healing, so that I can go to work sooner. The down side,
    of course, is that this confuses my body's healing mechanism, so my
    organism becomes less and less capable to heal itself.
             The other case, when I was a kid, once I was really ill, with
    really high temperature. Of course, my mother did what she needs,
    wrapped me well. But the temperature becomes too high, and I knew that
    now it is time to cool me off. But my mother didn't now this yet, and
    I was afraid to tell her, because I thought that elders are smart
    enough to know how it is done. When my mother realized (by measuring
    my temperature) that I am too hot, it was almost too late. I should
    have told her to cool me off when I felt it is time for that. See, I
    have to have the feeling for it, all your "rigorously" developed
    things are not good enough. Just like your science *isn't* good
    enough. It will never work, it will never make you understand, you
    have to start to use your brain.

    You're a single data point. One of my neighbors
    had an organ transplant earlier this year. *NO*
    amount of self healing would have repaired
    what they had, only rigorous science saved them.
    They're now mowing their lawn and driving to the
    store and everything. There's another data point.

    Well, your data point is malfunctioning. I know that you don't care.
    That's alright, this is why we have evolution. I would run away from
    your neighbor who is full with transplanted organs, because if I stay
    close to him I too will only be able to function, not by the way of my
    own organs, but by the way of somebody else's organs. Presumably organs
    took away from people who aren't developed as much as you are.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Fri Jun 28 23:33:33 2024
    On 28.6.2024. 5:50, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             In my view "Moderns" are erectus/Neanderthals plus chin and >> high forehead (globular brain). This is a consequence of massive usage
    of hematite. Massive usage of hematite is where you have developed
    societies, with a lot of people, with trading routes, with cereals.
    This cannot be Neanderthal, this can be Africa or India. Massive usage
    of hematite spread from there.

    Yes except for the fact that the Africans weren't a separate species.
    They were all effectively the same population, or descendants of the
    same population, and are best grouped with the Eurasians.

    Of course the Bantu Expansion was incredibly recent so that could very
    well be destroying our picture here...

    Good point about the Neanderthals though. They appear to have been
    more territorial, except for the females it looks like.

    It's currently believed that Neanderthal FEMALES suffered from a form
    of Wander Lust, leaving a group (clan?) and joining another, similar to
    how Chimps are known to behave.

    #1.  The African population in Out of Africa purity was a Eurasian group >>> that migrated into Africa.

             Nobody migrated anywhere.

    Clearly self refuting.

    It is the chin and globular brain (usage of hematite) that spread.

    It is true that they needed to only interbreed with neighboring
    populations to move genes (traits) around, all those other
    populations had to migrate to get there in the first place!

    The real answer is Aquatic Ape, of course...

    You don't get this at all. First, genes don't fall from skies, they
    are a product of adaptation. Second, who says that the gene that
    produces chin is the same in Africans and in Europeans? You don't know
    which genes are involved, nobody knows nothing about it, scientists are
    just spreading fairy tales.
    And the third, chin isn't a product of spreading of genes, but of the
    usage of hematite. Bodies in all humans adapted to the usage of
    hematite. Probably different gene modifications happened in different
    and distant populations, for this to happen.
    From what I wrote, if you understand it, you can figure out how childish the standard view on this is. Standard view is very similar to Medieval sorcery, abracadabra, and here you have it, a chin.

             BS. Animals, and people, are selected. Claiming that you know
    the method and reason of selection has more with religion than with
    the real knowledge.

    No, there's real science behind it.

    Google r/K Selection.

    Though often attacked as "Racist" -- because why wouldn't they? --
    there is TONS of evidence for differing breeding strategies.

    One researcher, and this is behind a firewall now but you can
    find cites to it if you Google it, concluded that penis size maps
    to r/K Selection, so the smaller your willy the more highly
    evolved you are.

        ...I don't know about you but, when I read the paper I went &
    sat in a tub of ice water for an hour.

    "Look!  Look at me!  I'm evolutionary superior to you!"

    Actually, the researcher concluded that Asians had the smallest
    willies, African the largest and Europeans in the middle...

    Testicle size is another piece of evidence. Though human balz
    are hardly uniform:  Gorillas have little or no sperm
    competition and have the smallest wobbly orbs. Chimps have lots
    of sperm competition and they have the largest. Humans lay
    somewhere between the two.

    You could also do the Google on Neonatal traits. These strongly
    suggest sexual selection...

    Gee, of course willies, testicles, eye color, length of nose, everything is selected. The question is, which is more important? Now, I
    do have my opinion on this, and sexuality definitely is one of more
    important things in life, and humans definitely have unique sexual life.
    But this isn't, in no way, the whole picture of our evolution, like you
    are fixated on it. It is just your fixture, your little world. In this particular time and space. For somebody else, in some other times and
    spaces, things can be different. Depending on circumstances, not on your wishes.

    Maybe people were selected for their stupidity, because civilization,
    living in large groups, prefers people to be like sheep, and not to be
    individuals.

    It is claimed that aggression is being bred out of humans. That,
    the more aggressive you are, the more likely you are to kill but
    also the more likely that you will be killed.

    Aggressive opponents were usually killed... still are in many
    examples. A docile opponent is not a threat.

    Just thousand years ago conquerors from Euroasian steppe were conquering the whole world. Just few hundred years ago white man ruled
    the world. You are probably white, what in the whole world you are doing
    in America, you should be, and stay, in Europe? And what your sexual
    selection has to do with you being in America? You wiped off natives, by
    sexual selection? Because you have smaller (or bigger) willy?

    Your insisting on "bottlenecks" also is pretty religious.

    No. Bottlenecks did occur. They were inescapable. The Founder
    Effect is a bottleneck on a micro scale, Toba was a bottleneck
    on a macro scale but they are both bottlenecks.

    Yes, but what exactly is "bottleneck" to you? Smaller or bigger gene
    diversity? We have large gene diversity in Africa, and small in the rest
    of the world. Per your definition, we have "bottleneck" in the rest of
    the world, and Africa is the most advanced. And look at that, the real
    life is exactly the opposite. Small gene diversity means developed
    societies where genes average over time, while large gene diversity
    means *smaller* groups that are separated. Now, ask yourself what those
    stupid scientists regard as a "bottleneck", small or large gene diversity?

    Dogs are all one species.

             Baboons aren't. Dogs are one species solely because they all
    are human accompaniments. If they would be judged by their looks, they
    would all be different species.

    Yes. If all our today's dog breeds were known only from the fossil
    record -- from the Jurassic, say -- they would all be called
    different species. This is a condemnation of our concept of "Species,"
    not dog breeds.

             First, plate tectonics is driven by cracks made by asteroid >> impacts.

    There are some who link the formation of continental plates with
    impacts, yes, but it hardly seems relevant. It can't alter the fact
    that there are continents and they do move -- which is the concept
    I introduced.

    Gee, yes, they move, but nobody knows what force moves them. I am
    saying that cracks move them. So, asteroid impact produces cracks, and
    those cracks move continents. Actually, recent research proved that
    cracks move continents. Now, the only thing that they miss is what forms cracks. I say asteroid impacts form cracks. Gee, for whole my life I
    have to wait science to catch me.

             Milankovitch cycles have nothing to do with long term
    changes, they have something to do with fluctuations, because they
    reflect the changes in Earth orbit around the Sun, this is why they
    are "cycles",

    The point is that they are cycles. The earth moves through cycles and
    those cycles all by themselves can and do result in changes to the
    climate.

    Gee, Milankovitch cycles are around 0.1 my long, not 15 my. There are
    other factors besides Milankovitch cycles.

    they are cyclic. I am talking about permanent changes. 15 mya Earth
    started to cool off. This is because of deforestation (not because of
    Milankoitch, or Earth orbit), which allowed for greater albedo, Earth
    started to lose heat because of greater albedo.

    https://www.livescience.com/is-earth-moving-closer-farther-sun

    Eventually the earth will be out where Mars is today...

             I don't believe this statistics at all.

    Well why on earth would you when you have a hat full of baseless
    assertions to argue?

    If you account one that lives to 60, and a baby that died the day it
    is born, the average is 30 years.

    It is extremely hard to factor in babies because so many of them
    would have died -- or even been killed -- while precious few
    would have been afforded a proper burial.

    This doesn't mean that you can use all the babies to twist the statistics, if you want it. It is so easy to twist the statistics, as
    you can see.

    It is so stupid to use the number 30 for anything (except for
    "proving" that we live longer today just because our babies, which
    should die, survive, we don't let them die). This example shows you
    how easy it is to manipulate those numbers.

    That would make sense if we stopped at babies. Which we don't.

    Modern medicine prevents people from dying. Brushing your teeth
    prevents people from dying. Using soap prevents people from
    dying. Proper nutrition prevents people from dying. Just knowing
    what is harmful prevents people from dying.

    We don't use lead as a cosmetic or a sweetener anymore...

    During the American Civil War the link between "Germs" and infection
    was already known, but most (nearly all) of the doctors were
    educated before these things were taught. Doctors saw dozens, even
    hundreds of patients in a single day, never once washing their hands
    between them... many thousands died of infections that never needed
    to happen.

    And, dude, that was some 1,300 years after Rome official fell.

    So, today we are living in a sterile world, and we die of COVID. Guess
    what, COVID didn't fall from skies, it was always here. The difference
    is that we didn't die because of it, and today we are dying, because our
    immune system isn't fit anymore, we depend on doctors to keep us alive,
    not on our immune system. So now I have to work to pay a doctor to keep
    me alive. Yesterday I kept myself alive doing absolutely nothing.

             As I said, they worked much less, and ate much healthier food
    than us.

    No they didn't. Even if they got bread made from "Healthier"
    wheat, that didn't mean the diet was healthy.

    I would rather not comment on this. Our food is contaminated with so
    many things, starting with pesticides, and continuing with a long list
    of everything else, ending with conservants. You have such a list
    printed on every product you are buying. If you don't die immediately
    eating this, and if nobody can prove that those things are actually
    harmful, this doesn't mean that they aren't harmful.

    This picture of hard work and bad diet is so wrong, and the data that
    proves it is probably extremely manipulated and twisted.

    They all had university degrees in nutrition and could afford a
    balanced diet of only the finest ingredients...

    Guess what, every animal has balanced diet, except the one animal that
    has university degrees.

    I mean, catholic priests are the authors of all the scientific
    theories of Genesis.

    Not on this planet.

    Big Bang theory, Genetic Mutation Theory, the authors are catholic
    priests.

    Scientists are idiots whom you can manipulate whichever way you want.

    "100% of all science agrees with whomever is paying for it."

    That is a massive problem, as Gwobull Warbling proves.

    I bet that all those scientists that regularly encounter long life
    span in the past, are simply afraid to talk about it, because it is
    counter what standard view is.

    You've confused POTENTIAL lifespan with life expectancy, again.

    What does it mean *To You* if people died younger in the past?

             I am telling you, this view is so wrong, we work more and we
    are eating junk.

    Not what I asked. What does it mean TO YOU if people died at a
    younger age in the past?

    Not to me, I am not claiming that people died at a younger age. The
    ones who are claiming this have the benefit of you wanting to work 8
    hours a day, thinking that that way you are improving your lifestyle.
    IOW, you work 8 hours per day *for them*, and you even feel lucky doing
    it. Because you think that it is better that way than it was in the
    past. You even feel grateful to them, because they allowed you to work 8
    hours a day for them, imagine how the life would be if they didn't make
    it happen, the life would be real hell, like it was in the past. So, you
    are very happy to work for them, instead of enjoying your life, like
    people enjoyed their lives in the past.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Sat Jun 29 23:45:46 2024
    On 29.6.2024. 4:54, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             You don't get this at all. First, genes don't fall from
    skies, they are a product of adaptation.

    Not really. It's more like a spaghetti strainer; a colander. There
    is no magic fairy guiding anything. In fact, the single most common
    outcome is extinction. Populations don't "Adapt," they go extinct.

    THAT is the most common outcome...

    Actually, I don't agree. Animals adapt pretty well, only catastrophic
    events, when everything changes on mass scale, extincts animals. If
    animals go extinct, we wouldn't have any animal left.

    In the case of so called "Moderns," there were many different,
    distinct populations and they effectively "Adapted" in isolation,
    only to end up sharing their DNA with others though they themselves
    migrating or indirectly through the waterside population who came
    into contact with different groups, as they followed the coast.

    I don't agree at all. Homo erectus lived stationary inland lifestyle.
    Hand axes were shovels, you use shovels when you want to establish your existence on one place, not when you move around.

    Second, who says that the gene that produces chin is the same in
    Africans and in Europeans?

    Part of the problem is, you never established that this is important.

    Brow ridges aren't.

    To me these chins seems to be evidence of... what? Maybe sexual
    selection? Dominant numbers?

    It's not an "Innovation." It's not like they couldn't eat, couldn't
    sleep AND THEN someone "Evolved" a chin and they immediately used
    it to invent the bow & arrow...

    You're too well trained!  They ring the "Chin" bell and you
    salivate...

    With chin it is easy. Chin is the product of recession of teeth. The
    recession of teeth is the product of the use of sharp metal (hematite)
    to cut meat. Teeth are used only for one reason, to cut food (canines
    are also used for fighting, but we don't have those, meaning, we were
    the dominant species since when we started to lose canines, and this was
    10 mya). We, even today, use sharp metal to cut food. Humans started to
    use sharp metal (hematite) 300 kya, and teeth lost its function, so they receded. Simple.

    You don't know which genes are involved, nobody knows nothing about
    it, scientists are just spreading fairy tales.

    One "Fairy tale" is that chins matter, that they are anything other
    than the product of sexual selection.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Primum Sapienti@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Sat Jun 29 22:31:35 2024
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 28.6.2024. 5:35, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 24.6.2024. 23:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 24.6.2024. 6:37, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 20.6.2024. 3:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 19.6.2024. 6:40, Primum Sapienti wrote:

    https://news.asu.edu/20240617-science-and-technology-asu-study-points-origin-cumulative-culture-human-evolution


             Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times >>>>>>> more, 600 kya. Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but
    500 times more 450 kya.
             But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well, >>>>>>> science will wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence, stupid >>>>>>> science.

             Science, with its stupid rules, only hinders human >>>>>> understanding, stupid science. Like, somebody deliberately demand
    that accepted view meet all the strict criteria, so that it never
    moves forward. Nobody understands anything. They were studying so
    hard, they accumulated so large knowledge, yet, they completely
    lack in understanding, because studying *isn't* understanding. The >>>>>> one who doesn't understand, the bigger the knowledge he has, the
    more chance that he will look at the wrong direction. Because he
    is unable to understand, studying isn't everything.

    You don't want to make the mistake of the
    Aquatic SimianS of staring off into space
    and imagining how something was. Concrete
    evidence is indeed critical whatever field
    of science is involved. Would you want to
    take a medicine that wasn't rigoursly
    developed?

             I wouldn't want to take a medicine at all, my body should >>>> be fit enough to keep itself alive. Medicine, how much good it is,
    cannot replace this. It is like asking me, would you like to run on
    your own legs, or would you like to replace them with very
    rigorously developed prosthesis.
             Your view on this is like, would you like to think with >>>> your brain, or would you like to think with your eyes. I am using
    eyes for looking, and brain for thinking. You see an evidence, and
    for you this is what? Why don't you use your brain? Why your brain
    is on idle? Should it be on idle? Somebody told you not to use your
    brain, and you gladly complied. I will never comply with this.

             I will tell you about my experience with medicine. Once I >>> was involved in road accident, my leg almost broke, but it didn't,
    only my muscles got squeezed a lot, and I was incapable to walk
    freely for two months, which means that I didn't go to work for two
    months (it is allowed and paid for in my country). My doctor put some
    medicine on the leg, and I asked him (sarcastically), if he wouldn't
    do that would I die? He just smiled at me, of course I wouldn't, his
    medicine just quickens my healing, so that I can go to work sooner.
    The down side, of course, is that this confuses my body's healing
    mechanism, so my organism becomes less and less capable to heal itself.
             The other case, when I was a kid, once I was really ill, >>> with really high temperature. Of course, my mother did what she
    needs, wrapped me well. But the temperature becomes too high, and I
    knew that now it is time to cool me off. But my mother didn't now
    this yet, and I was afraid to tell her, because I thought that elders
    are smart enough to know how it is done. When my mother realized (by
    measuring my temperature) that I am too hot, it was almost too late.
    I should have told her to cool me off when I felt it is time for
    that. See, I have to have the feeling for it, all your "rigorously"
    developed things are not good enough. Just like your science *isn't*
    good enough. It will never work, it will never make you understand,
    you have to start to use your brain.

    You're a single data point. One of my neighbors
    had an organ transplant earlier this year. *NO*
    amount of self healing would have repaired
    what they had, only rigorous science saved them.
    They're now mowing their lawn and driving to the
    store and everything. There's another data point.

            Well, your data point is malfunctioning. I know that you don't
    care. That's alright, this is why we have evolution. I would run away
    from your neighbor who is full with transplanted organs, because if I
    stay close to him I too will only be able to function, not by the way of
    my own organs, but by the way of somebody else's organs. Presumably
    organs took away from people who aren't developed as much as you are.

    Transplanted organs are not contagious ;)

    Meanwhile, your food, your clothes, your computer,
    your car, your *anything* - science is behind it.

    Evolution is not perfect.

    https://www.science.org/content/article/deadly-human-bone-cancer-found-240-million-year-old-turtle

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Primum Sapienti on Sun Jun 30 06:44:08 2024
    On 30.6.2024. 6:31, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 28.6.2024. 5:35, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 24.6.2024. 23:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 24.6.2024. 6:37, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 20.6.2024. 3:24, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 19.6.2024. 6:40, Primum Sapienti wrote:
    https://news.asu.edu/20240617-science-and-technology-asu-study-points-origin-cumulative-culture-human-evolution


             Complex societies, cereals. Not 12 kya but 50 times >>>>>>>> more, 600 kya. Just like with wooden structures, not 9 kya, but >>>>>>>> 500 times more 450 kya.
             But, of course, science needs concrete evidence. Well,
    science will wait a lot, till it gets the direct evidence,
    stupid science.

             Science, with its stupid rules, only hinders human >>>>>>> understanding, stupid science. Like, somebody deliberately demand >>>>>>> that accepted view meet all the strict criteria, so that it never >>>>>>> moves forward. Nobody understands anything. They were studying so >>>>>>> hard, they accumulated so large knowledge, yet, they completely
    lack in understanding, because studying *isn't* understanding.
    The one who doesn't understand, the bigger the knowledge he has, >>>>>>> the more chance that he will look at the wrong direction. Because >>>>>>> he is unable to understand, studying isn't everything.

    You don't want to make the mistake of the
    Aquatic SimianS of staring off into space
    and imagining how something was. Concrete
    evidence is indeed critical whatever field
    of science is involved. Would you want to
    take a medicine that wasn't rigoursly
    developed?

             I wouldn't want to take a medicine at all, my body should
    be fit enough to keep itself alive. Medicine, how much good it is,
    cannot replace this. It is like asking me, would you like to run on
    your own legs, or would you like to replace them with very
    rigorously developed prosthesis.
             Your view on this is like, would you like to think with >>>>> your brain, or would you like to think with your eyes. I am using
    eyes for looking, and brain for thinking. You see an evidence, and
    for you this is what? Why don't you use your brain? Why your brain
    is on idle? Should it be on idle? Somebody told you not to use your
    brain, and you gladly complied. I will never comply with this.

             I will tell you about my experience with medicine. Once I >>>> was involved in road accident, my leg almost broke, but it didn't,
    only my muscles got squeezed a lot, and I was incapable to walk
    freely for two months, which means that I didn't go to work for two
    months (it is allowed and paid for in my country). My doctor put
    some medicine on the leg, and I asked him (sarcastically), if he
    wouldn't do that would I die? He just smiled at me, of course I
    wouldn't, his medicine just quickens my healing, so that I can go to
    work sooner. The down side, of course, is that this confuses my
    body's healing mechanism, so my organism becomes less and less
    capable to heal itself.
             The other case, when I was a kid, once I was really ill, >>>> with really high temperature. Of course, my mother did what she
    needs, wrapped me well. But the temperature becomes too high, and I
    knew that now it is time to cool me off. But my mother didn't now
    this yet, and I was afraid to tell her, because I thought that
    elders are smart enough to know how it is done. When my mother
    realized (by measuring my temperature) that I am too hot, it was
    almost too late. I should have told her to cool me off when I felt
    it is time for that. See, I have to have the feeling for it, all
    your "rigorously" developed things are not good enough. Just like
    your science *isn't* good enough. It will never work, it will never
    make you understand, you have to start to use your brain.

    You're a single data point. One of my neighbors
    had an organ transplant earlier this year. *NO*
    amount of self healing would have repaired
    what they had, only rigorous science saved them.
    They're now mowing their lawn and driving to the
    store and everything. There's another data point.

             Well, your data point is malfunctioning. I know that you
    don't care. That's alright, this is why we have evolution. I would run
    away from your neighbor who is full with transplanted organs, because
    if I stay close to him I too will only be able to function, not by the
    way of my own organs, but by the way of somebody else's organs.
    Presumably organs took away from people who aren't developed as much
    as you are.

    Transplanted organs are not contagious ;)

    Meanwhile, your food, your clothes, your computer,
    your car, your *anything* - science is behind it.

    Evolution is not perfect.

    https://www.science.org/content/article/deadly-human-bone-cancer-found-240-million-year-old-turtle


    I would be more careful, though.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Sun Jun 30 06:50:33 2024
    On 30.6.2024. 6:28, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:

             I don't agree at all. Homo erectus lived stationary inland >> lifestyle. Hand axes were shovels, you use shovels when you want to
    establish your existence on one place, not when you move around.

    The overwhelming majority of all species to ever exist are gone.

    Dead.

    Extinct.

    Big pile of extinct species HERE, tiny pile of living species THERE.

    Species occupy niche. If a species fits a niche, another species from
    another niche will not fit that well. It is niche that is occupied by a
    living organism, this way or that way. See Fossa.

             With chin it is easy. Chin is the product of recession of >> teeth. The recession of teeth is the product of the use of sharp metal
    (hematite) to cut meat.

    It's not that hard. The best of it is a lot softer than flint.

    But you are correct in that the face can be changed as much from
    behaviors as anything else.

    Do the Google on eating utensils and the human face...

    But I seriously doubt that's what we're seeing in the case of the chin.
    If anything, the populations outside of Africa had the larger brains,
    were more advanced. So, again, it looks more like sexual selection going here.

    Hematite is harder than iron. When you smelt hematite into iron, it
    actually loses hardness, iron is more elastic, softer than hematite.
    In my view brain volume is for thermal reason. So, northern species
    have bigger volume, southern have smaller volume.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Mon Jul 1 16:13:18 2024
    On 1.7.2024. 1:37, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Hematite is harder than iron.

    They didn't have iron. But Hematite runs form soft to
    medium hard. There are better stones.

    Like I said, there is a lot of work concerning eating
    utensils and the changes to the human face.

    Hematite has hardness 5 to 6, iron has 4.5. It has metallic luster,
    therefore it is a metal.
    300 kya people started to grind hematite a lot (hence red ochre). The
    change in face is straight forward, teeth receded, producing a chin.
    This happened simultaneously with the emergence of red ochre. Hence the
    fairy tale that H.sapiens is "spiritual" because it used red orche to
    paint his body.
    https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hematite https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardnesses_of_the_elements_(data_page)
    JTEM, why you are so much refusing to learn something?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Tue Jul 2 00:31:59 2024
    On 1.7.2024. 21:40, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Hematite has hardness 5 to 6, iron has 4.5. It has metallic >> luster, therefore it is a metal.
             300 kya people started to grind hematite a lot (hence red >> ochre). The change in face is straight forward, teeth receded,
    producing a chin. This happened simultaneously with the emergence of
    red ochre. Hence the fairy tale that H.sapiens is "spiritual" because
    it used red orche to paint his body.

    They did use red orche to paint their bodies. This is far from "Proof"
    that they were spiritual, but it is evidence consistent with it.

    Far better evidence is intentional burials, caring for the dead. It
    implies a belief in an afterlife.

    Again, far from "Proof" but it is evidence consistent with the view.

    If "Spirituality" is a soft spot for you, delete the word and replace
    it with two words:  "Symbolic Thinking."

    This is something that almost certainly pre dated (so called)
    "Modern" man, but how much?

    Chimps and gorillas display some level of symbolic thinking, more so
    than young human children...

    One experiment showed young children a model of a room, and then
    showed them where a toy was hidden in that model. Next, they placed
    them in that room! They didn't find the toy.

    The idea here is that spirituality, religious beliefs required a
    level of this "Symbolic Thinking" that just plain doesn't exist in
    "Lower life forms."

    Thus, evidence for mysticism/spirituality is evidence for symbolic
    thinking, and evidence for symbolic thinking is evidence for mysticism/spirituality.

    As for habits/tools changing the face...

    If hematite resulted in a chin, absence of that hematite should
    present the absence of a chin.

    Is this what we see?

    Gee, I cannot believe this, a waste of time. People use hematite, like
    300 kya, but to use it as a paint (as far as I know), you have to mix it
    with milk. This only happened 100 kya. I mean, to get red ochre by
    grinding hematite is very hard working process. If they used it for
    painting, why they left it in the ground, in such a huge quantity (there
    where thick layers of red ochre), why they *didn't* use it as a paint?
    You are telling me that they made such a big effort to attain red ochre,
    and then they just left it in the ground?
    This "symbolic thinking" is a hoax. Language per se, produces "symbolic thinking". And we definitely had language at least for 3 my
    (stone tools making).
    Burial definitely is belief in afterlife, but why would you do it if
    you are enjoying real life? To me the belief in afterlife comes from a situation when your existence relies on developed society, and you have
    low position in this society, so you hope that in afterlife you'll get
    better. Of course, the afterlife would be your reward for behaving in accordance with social rules in real life. So, the belief in afterlife I
    tie with very advanced societies.
    And, at the end, it isn't the hematite that resulted in chin, it is
    the use of metal for cutting food that resulted in chin. In the past we
    used hematite for that, today we are also using metal for that, only
    this metal is smelted and then ground, unlike hematite, which was just
    ground. Actually, the iron that you are using today *is* hematite,
    hematite is iron ore.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Tue Jul 2 03:50:36 2024
    On 2.7.2024. 3:15, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Gee, I cannot believe this, a waste of time. People use
    hematite, like 300 kya, but to use it as a paint (as far as I know),
    you have to mix it with milk. This only happened 100 kya. I mean, to
    get red ochre by

    You're confusing yourself.

    Your claim is that hematite is what resulted in chins. That, the
    reason why the characterization of so called moderns includes chins
    is because of the use of hematite. WHICH REQUIRES that where and
    when hematite is not used we will not find people with chins.

             This "symbolic thinking" is a hoax.

    In your case, absolutely. But that is mere anecdote and anecdotal
    evidence is no evidence at all...

    There is hard science on symbolic thinking.

    One clear example and the absolute minimum age would have to be
    on the appearance of... jewelry!

    Ordination.

    Art.

    You mean, if somebody would accidentally lose something that is valuable? No, you don't accidentally lose something that is valuable.
    Lets see the very recent example. We had "Iron Age", before that it was
    "Bronze Age", before that it was "Copper Age". They know when Iron Age
    started, they do know when Bronze Age started, but they have not the
    slightest idea when Copper Age started. Why? Because all the copper was
    later smelted into bronze. No, they didn't lose this valuable metal by
    the way, they cared about it, they transferred it to their children,
    they didn't just carelessly drop it in nature. The first valuables we
    find when the afterlife idea developed, when people were buried with
    their valuables, before that nobody was dropping their valuables by the way.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Tue Jul 2 03:53:10 2024
    On 2.7.2024. 3:15, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Gee, I cannot believe this, a waste of time. People use
    hematite, like 300 kya, but to use it as a paint (as far as I know),
    you have to mix it with milk. This only happened 100 kya. I mean, to
    get red ochre by

    You're confusing yourself.

    Your claim is that hematite is what resulted in chins. That, the
    reason why the characterization of so called moderns includes chins
    is because of the use of hematite. WHICH REQUIRES that where and
    when hematite is not used we will not find people with chins.

    Didn't I correct this, replacing "hematite" with "metal"?
    Didn't you notice this?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Tue Jul 2 17:31:02 2024
    On 2.7.2024. 5:49, JTEM wrote:
    On 7/1/24 9:50 PM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    JTEM wrote:
    There is hard science on symbolic thinking.

    One clear example and the absolute minimum age would have to be
    on the appearance of... jewelry!

    Ordination.

    Art.

             You mean, if somebody would accidentally lose something that
    is valuable?

    No. I mean people could create art.

    Don't you say? Cows cannot. Gee, aren't we something? Cows cannot open
    the door, how stupid they are. Cows also cannot turn on the tv set. Gee,
    we are such a geniuses, we can press the button, gee we are god-like.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Tue Jul 2 17:34:13 2024
    On 2.7.2024. 17:31, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 2.7.2024. 5:49, JTEM wrote:
    On 7/1/24 9:50 PM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    JTEM wrote:
    There is hard science on symbolic thinking.

    One clear example and the absolute minimum age would have to be
    on the appearance of... jewelry!

    Ordination.

    Art.

             You mean, if somebody would accidentally lose something that
    is valuable?

    No. I mean people could create art.

            Don't you say? Cows cannot. Gee, aren't we something? Cows cannot open the door, how stupid they are. Cows also cannot turn on the
    tv set. Gee, we are such a geniuses, we can press the button, gee we are god-like.

    https://youtu.be/fTD54ncetAk?si=uVyw2zDmqVW6XJCX

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to Mario Petrinovic on Tue Jul 2 17:37:22 2024
    On 2.7.2024. 17:34, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 2.7.2024. 17:31, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    On 2.7.2024. 5:49, JTEM wrote:
    On 7/1/24 9:50 PM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    JTEM wrote:
    There is hard science on symbolic thinking.

    One clear example and the absolute minimum age would have to be
    on the appearance of... jewelry!

    Ordination.

    Art.

             You mean, if somebody would accidentally lose something >>>> that is valuable?

    No. I mean people could create art.

             Don't you say? Cows cannot. Gee, aren't we something? Cows >> cannot open the door, how stupid they are. Cows also cannot turn on
    the tv set. Gee, we are such a geniuses, we can press the button, gee
    we are god-like.

    https://youtu.be/fTD54ncetAk?si=uVyw2zDmqVW6XJCX

    https://youtu.be/hpdlQae5wP8?si=lN_h4UaraIhgBlHM

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Tue Jul 2 17:39:58 2024
    On 2.7.2024. 5:51, JTEM wrote:
     Mario Petrinovic wrote:
    JTEM wrote:
    You're confusing yourself.

    Your claim is that hematite is what resulted in chins. That, the
    reason why the characterization of so called moderns includes chins
    is because of the use of hematite. WHICH REQUIRES that where and
    when hematite is not used we will not find people with chins.

             Didn't I correct this, replacing "hematite" with "metal"?

    Of course not. That's stupid even suggesting it. Metallurgy began
    long after humans supposedly had chins.

    Didn't you notice this?

    You're a batshit crazy troll.

    And you are just stupid as hell.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Wed Jul 3 23:16:42 2024
    On 3.7.2024. 0:04, JTEM wrote:
    Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Don't you say? Cows cannot. Gee, aren't we something? Cows >> cannot open the door, how stupid they are. Cows also cannot turn on
    the tv set. Gee, we are such a geniuses, we can press the button, gee
    we are god-like.

    You're right. We are. We can create.

    We can envision something that does not exist. We can stylize,
    embellish... imagine.

    We can.

    At some point a VERY long time ago humans stopped picking up
    rocks they could use as "Tools" and started fashioning rocks
    that lacked the desired properties into rocks that had them.
    Later still...

    Humans moved beyond nature. No longer did our ancestors hunt
    for the perfect stone, no longer did our ancestors turn
    imperfect stones into perfect ones, they began to fashion items
    which could not be found in nature no matter where they looked,
    or for how long.

    They conceptualized.

    And that skill wasn't limited to rocks. They could conceptualize
    things that they were totally incapable of producing or finding,
    like spirits.

    And yes, they made art.

    Humans are creators.

    Of course. But only after they drunk the magic spell: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/K6P4bRKEirs

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mario Petrinovic@21:1/5 to JTEM on Thu Jul 4 01:29:40 2024
    On 4.7.2024. 0:39, JTEM wrote:
    On 7/3/24 5:16 PM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
             Of course. But only after they drunk the magic spell:
    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/K6P4bRKEirs

    In many places in this world right now there are idiots feeling
    insulted by the comparison to you...

    Oh yes, I know. This is why they are idiots. Smart people would be
    honored.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)