Samantha
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School December 14th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 4 months, 2 weeks agoTheEncogitationer wrote:
And an assassin’s bullet did nothing but give Charlie Kirk martyr statusIt did, and any political violence is deplorable. Even if he was aggressively anti-liberal, he had the right idea in debating people.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School December 14th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 4 months, 2 weeks ago@jakelafort – I stay out of the “left”, I won’t sign my name to any ideology. I find them totally nuts. I saw that Instagram post, and they seem to have forgotten that slavery was invented in the Bronze Age. I’ve had conversations with feminists who are completely ideology-bound until you shock them out of it. The big problem is gro…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School December 14th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 4 months, 2 weeks agoTheEncogitationer wrote:
There would be little place for the very young, the very old, or the sick and infirm in a Hunter-Gatherer world.That’s not true at all. There’s plenty of evidence of prehistoric people caring for their sick and injured, and this evidence increases as we get nearer the present day.
E.g.:…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School December 14th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 4 months, 2 weeks agojakelafort wrote:
if you would give the aspects of wokeness that you are supporting.Just the general pro-human rights, pro-sexual freedom (except pedophiles), anti-racist, that’s it.
I think Republicans who are not being crooked snakes should have a respectable platform. If they are being crooked snakes, they will have manufactured a platform…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School December 14th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 4 months, 2 weeks agoReg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
Debunking the myth of truly egalitarian societies in human history.We knew this already. Present-day hunter-gatherers are not so egalitarian. Except for the Batek of Malaysia, who are very egalitarian and do not have patriarchy, and the article does not contradict this.
demand-sharing, risk-pooling, s…
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School December 14th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 4 months, 2 weeks agoReg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
And now the War on ‘Wokeness’ comes to the U.S. Mint……I have to say, I think the designs that made it through look more inspiring than a pair of shackled wrists or Rosa Parks. I think they’re more universal too. But I deplore Trump’s fascist takeover.
I don’t agree with a War on Woke either. I like wokeness. …[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School December 14th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 4 months, 3 weeks agoReg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
The sadistic rewards of cancel culture.The Charlie Kirk purge: How 600 Americans were punished in a pro-Trump crackdown.
Now that the Right are cancelling the Left – are the woke still in love with cancel culture?
[Far-right nutter] Delay told Reuters that he believes in “accountability and consequences” and tha…
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Simon Paynton posted an update 4 months, 3 weeks ago
I’ve just found out that the field of evolutionary ethics is very small, and the rest of philosophy hasn’t heard of us, and if they have, they think we’re wildly experimental. We think they’re stuck-in-the-mud dinosaurs. Apparently evolutionary ethics is a cottage industry. That’s true.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School December 7th 2025 in the forum Sunday School December 7th 2025 4 months, 3 weeks ago
Reg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
AI is destroying learning at university.I’m not sure it is that simple. In the UK, the universities are having trouble funding themselves, and it sounds similar in the US. I don’t know all the reasons for that, and the two may have the same causes. So, they want to save money, so they cut courses and “o…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic A Formal Mathematical Model of The Holy Trinity. in the forum Atheism 4 months, 3 weeks ago
@theencogitationer – if you do that math, it’s 1-2-3-4 gruesome.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic A Formal Mathematical Model of The Holy Trinity. in the forum Atheism 4 months, 3 weeks ago
Why is Jesus not upside down, or at a quarter to, or quarter past? Why that particular orientation of feet down?
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School November 30th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 5 months agoReg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
vitalismI think it makes much more sense to say that life is matter that processes resources for its own benefit, than to say that life is that which contains a vital essence.
All living things have electrical and chemical energy coursing round their bodies. When they die, this activity ceases. Yet they are not b…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School November 30th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 5 months agoReg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
Life Is just Matter with Meaning.This article is super-interesting. Life is what happens when inert matter starts processing resources in order to promote its own survival. That’s basically the starting axiom of my evolutionary ethics model.
They say the organism is processing information, which includes r…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School November 16th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 5 months, 1 week agoReg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
But yes, we made progress in the sense that we evolved to live in all of the Earth’s extremes.Yes, and we’ve wrecked every single one. We can’t compare one species with another to say one is better than the other. Like you say, each is optimised for their environment.
We’ve made progress – but in what kinds of…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School November 16th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 5 months, 1 week agoReg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
But cooperative breeding, known as ‘alloparenting’, where individuals other than the biological mother help raise offspring did not start with them. Hominins before erectus already had extended childhoods, reduced canines, increased sociality, and group-based foraging, all of which support cooperative care. Homo ere… -
Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School November 16th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 5 months, 1 week agoApparently the first human species to make it out of Africa was Homo erectus, ~2 million years ago, and they were the first species to do cooperative breeding, meaning that a woman could have more than one child at once, because she got help in looking after them. This meant that human children had longer in which to mature.
The human line must…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School November 16th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 5 months, 1 week agoWe know that there was a “last common ancestor” (LCA) of chimps/bonobos and humans around 6 million years ago. I believe the human line got started around 4.5 million years ago.

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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School November 16th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 5 months, 1 week agoReg the Fronkey Farmer wrote:
They are not some sort of “old” humans or “failed humans”. They are modern chimpanzees and specialists in their own ecological niche and with their own evolutionary pressures. Humans didn’t “progress”, we diverged.That’s true. But what changed was our environment, when theirs didn’t.
So, where we learned to cop…[Read more]
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School November 16th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 5 months, 1 week agojakelafort wrote:
Simon i think you are guilty of the same mindset as the scientists who first heard about Jane’s discovery.Not at all, I’ve read a lot of Michael Tomasello and Frans de Waal about what chimps and bonobos can and can’t do, and how they behave. It was Jane Goodall who paved the way for them.
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Simon Paynton replied to the topic Sunday School November 16th 2025 in the forum
Sunday School 5 months, 2 weeks agojakelafort wrote:
This theory suggests that during human evolution, we may have lost some ancestral short-term or working memory skills to make room in the brain for other, more complex functions, such as advanced language abilities, symbolic representation, and hierarchical thinking.Surely we grew bigger and more complex brains throughout our…[Read more]
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