Estimated User #1,446
1 fiction conversations
over 3 months, 28 days
(Jan 2, 2024 – Apr 29, 2024)
83% prompt uniqueness
Brandenburg, Germany
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Jan 2, 2024
Apr 29, 2024
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Conversation Clusters (6)
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C0
speculative or fict, but true story is that: mesopotamians compt out ocean after
2 conv.
C1
Emma woke up with a feeling of excitement. She was having the best summer ever,
1 conv.
C2
"without necessarily involving sexual activity.". nothing can be better than old
1 conv.
C3
I'm sure that Bathory lineage still persist but as a corporate secret. The notio
1 conv.
C4
maybe everything was much more banal than we thought?: monkey eaten radioactive
×
1 conv.
C5
you mazafaka delve right now in human interactions in simple concepts, not desci
1 conv.
1 conversation in cluster Cluster 4× “maybe everything was much more banal than we thought?: monke...” over less than a minute (Feb 13, 2024 – Feb 13, 2024), oldest first.
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USER: maybe everything was much more banal than we thought?: monkey eaten radioactive bananas and evolved into human due to permutations? bananas is radioactive. The theory you're suggesting--that humans evolved from monkeys that ate radioactive bananas and underwent mutations--is not supported by scientific evidence or evolutionary theory. The evolutionary process of humans from ancestral primates is a result of millions of years of gradual change influenced by a combination of genetic mutations, natural selection, and various other evolutionary pressures, not sudden changes due to eating radioactive food. Radiation can indeed cause mutations, but the vast majority of such mutations are harmful and do not lead to beneficial evolutionary changes. Most mutations caused by radiation would likely result in sickness or death rather than complex changes like the evolution of a new species. Humans and other primates share a common ancestor, and the evolutionary path from this common ancestor to Homo sapiens is well-documented and supported by a wealth of anatomical, genetic, and fossil evidence. This process involves a series of adaptations to different environments and survival challenges that spanned millions of years. Bananas do contain trace amounts of radioactive isotopes, such as potassium-40 (40K), which is naturally occurring. However, the levels of radioactivity in bananas are not high enough to pose a health risk to humans or to significantly increase the rate of mutation. The ...