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    Sturmführer Xeno Fish Biscuits (xenophon@nicecrew.digital)'s status on Friday, 07-Jul-2023 04:44:15 JSTSturmführer Xeno Fish BiscuitsSturmführer Xeno Fish Biscuits
    in reply to
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    Typical midwit response. It has nothing to do with the target, just with your faulty world view.

    What practical difference do you think it makes if an individual decides to never have children. I guarantee your argument will end up somewhere near "White genocide" which will never happen.

    Learn something.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolutionarily_stable_strategy
    In conversationFriday, 07-Jul-2023 04:44:15 JST from nicecrew.digitalpermalink

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      Evolutionarily stable strategy
      An evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS) is a strategy (or set of strategies) that is impermeable when adopted by a population in adaptation to a specific environment, that is to say it cannot be displaced by an alternative strategy (or set of strategies) which may be novel or initially rare. Introduced by John Maynard Smith and George R. Price in 1972/3, it is an important concept in behavioural ecology, evolutionary psychology, mathematical game theory and economics, with applications in other fields such as anthropology, philosophy and political science. In game-theoretical terms, an ESS is an equilibrium refinement of the Nash equilibrium, being a Nash equilibrium that is also "evolutionarily stable." Thus, once fixed in a population, natural selection alone is sufficient to prevent alternative (mutant) strategies from replacing it (although this does not preclude the possibility that a better strategy, or set of strategies, will emerge in response to selective pressures resulting from environmental change). History Evolutionarily stable strategies were defined and introduced by John Maynard Smith and George...
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