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Three Tidbit Stories

Topic:
Epistemology

How we know what we know — truth, belief, and justified ideas.

Epistemology.

3 random tidbit stories in about 3 minutes.

1.

Epistemology Story.

440,000 Years Ago (+/- 40,000 years)

NSLCA: The Neanderthal-Sapien Last Common Ancestor was likely Homo heidelbergensis or Homo antecessor.

Analysis: Before the discovery of Homo antecessor in the 1990s, Homo heidelbergensis was considered the primary candidate for the NSLCA due to its chronological and morphological position in the human lineage. The discovery of Homo antecessor, with its more modern-looking facial features, has intensified debates around the NSLCA’s identity. Recent scholarly speculation, influenced by the anatomical closeness of antecessor to modern humans and the larger brain of heidelbergensis, suggests a potential hybrid scenario where the NSLCA could represent a mix of traits from descendants of antecessor and contemporaneous heidelbergensis. This hybrid theory, while speculative, aligns with genetic evidence of interbreeding among Homo species.

Homo heidelbergensis first appeared in Africa around 770,000 to 650,000 years ago, while Homo antecessor emerged in Spain about 1.2 million years ago. If Homo antecessor is confirmed as our direct ancestor, this would imply that modern human features such as a flatter face and protruding nose may have evolved much earlier than previously thought, potentially as early as 1.2 million years ago. This scenario would also suggest complex migratory and evolutionary dynamics, possibly involving a back-migration of antecessor or its descendants into Africa, where the NSLCA would have emerged. This area remains a hotbed of research as new fossil discoveries continue to reshape our understanding of early human history.

 


That Epistemology Story, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.

2.

Epistemology Story.

The mature breakthrough came when the AI doctor shifted medicine from mostly reactive care to widely available proactive care. Instead of waiting until a person felt pain, found a lump, collapsed, or reached crisis, the AI doctor continuously watched patterns: family history, genetics when available, labs, wearable signals, imaging history, lifestyle markers, medications, and known risk factors. It did not merely say, “You seem sick.” It said, “Your pattern is changing. This scan, lab, or visit may catch something early.” In this future, the AI doctor became a low-cost or free personal health sentinel — opt-in, always present, and available to nearly everyone on Earth.

For this future to arrive, several variables had to click at once. AI had to become cheap enough to run at global scale. Medical records had to become portable enough to follow the patient. Diagnostic tools had to become faster, more automated, and less expensive. False positives had to be controlled so proactive care did not become panic care. Governments, insurers, and public-health systems had to decide that prevention was cheaper than late-stage treatment. This is where the mature model becomes bigger than software. The proactive AI doctor needs records, labs, wearables, imaging, human oversight, and access. If those pieces come together, healthcare changes from “go when you are hurt” to “watch wisely before harm arrives.”

 


That Epistemology Story, 

was first published on TST 2 months ago.

3.

Epistemology Story.

1400 BCE
circa 1700–1400 BCE

 (Crete, ) – The Palace of Knossos, the largest Bronze Age archaeological site on Crete, is famous for its sophisticated and colorful frescoes. These paintings depict a variety of subjects, including processions, animals, and scenes of daily life, characterized by naturalistic figures and a vibrant palette. One of the most iconic images is of the bull-leaping ceremony, showcasing the importance of bulls within Minoan culture and religion. The frescoes reflect the Minoan civilization’s artistic prowess, with a keen eye for naturalism, movement, and the depiction of textiles and patterns, setting them apart from the more stylized art of contemporaneous cultures.

 


That Epistemology Story, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.

The end. Refresh for another set.

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Writing and coding by Michael Alan Prestwood.
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