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evolutionary psychology 

The idea that human behavior can be explained through evolution. An idea usually hated by SJWs. It shows that human nature is biological, and not all just a social construct, and can be used to explain things such as gender differences.
The human brain, like the human body, has been shaped through evolution, hence evolutionary psychology.
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Critical Evolutionary Psychology

A critical examination of evolutionary psychology—questioning its assumptions about human nature, its methods for inferring ancestral environments, and its political implications. Critical Evolutionary Psychology asks: Are evolutionary stories just-so stories? Do they naturalize contemporary social arrangements by projecting them onto the past? How does evolutionary psychology handle cultural variation? Whose interests are served by claims that patriarchy, violence, or greed are "evolved"? Critical Evolutionary Psychology doesn't deny evolution; it insists that claims about our evolutionary past must be scrutinized for evidence, alternative explanations, and political context.
Critical Evolutionary Psychology "They claim women are naturally monogamous and men naturally promiscuous—therefore patriarchy is natural. Critical Evolutionary Psychology asks: what's the evidence? How much cultural variation is ignored? Could the same data support different stories? Evolution happened, but the stories we tell about it reflect our present, not just our past. Critical Evolutionary Psychology examines the politics behind the prehistory."

Leftist Evolutionary Psychology

A leftist approach to evolutionary psychology—questioning conservative assumptions about human nature while taking evolution seriously. Leftist Evolutionary Psychology asks: What if cooperation, sharing, and egalitarianism are as evolved as competition? What if human nature includes immense plasticity, shaped by social environments? What if evolutionary stories that naturalize hierarchy are ideology, not science? Leftist Evolutionary Psychology doesn't deny evolution; it insists that evolutionary explanations must be scrutinized for their political content and that human nature is both real and variable.
"They say men are naturally aggressive, women naturally nurturing—therefore patriarchy is natural. Leftist Evolutionary Psychology asks: what's the evidence? How much cultural variation? Could the same data support different stories? Evolution happened, but the stories we tell about it reflect our politics. Leftist evolutionary psychology tells different stories—about cooperation, about plasticity, about possibility."

Marxist Evolutionary Psychology

A Marxist critique and reconstruction of evolutionary psychology—examining how claims about human nature reflect class interests, how evolutionary stories can naturalize capitalism, and how a materialist approach might understand human evolution differently. Marxist Evolutionary Psychology asks: Does evolutionary psychology's focus on competition reflect capitalist ideology? How might cooperation, sharing, and egalitarianism be as "evolved" as hierarchy? Could a Marxist evolutionary psychology examine how modes of production shape human evolution, and how human nature is both biologically based and historically variable? It doesn't deny evolution; it insists that evolutionary stories are never neutral.
"They say humans are naturally competitive—look at our ancestors. Marxist Evolutionary Psychology asks: which ancestors? For most of human history, we were foragers, and foragers share. The 'natural' competition story reflects capitalism, not prehistory. Evolution happened, but the stories we tell about it tell us more about the present than the past. Marxism insists on asking: whose interests do these stories serve?"

Critical Theory of Evolutionary Psychology

The application of Critical Theory to evolutionary psychology—examining its assumptions about human nature, its methods for inferring ancestral environments, and its political implications. Critical Theory of Evolutionary Psychology asks: Are evolutionary stories just-so stories? Do they naturalize contemporary social arrangements? How does evolutionary psychology handle cultural variation? Whose interests are served by claims that patriarchy, violence, or greed are "evolved"? It doesn't deny evolution but insists that claims about our evolutionary past must be scrutinized for evidence, alternative explanations, and political context.
"They claim men are naturally aggressive—therefore patriarchy is natural. Critical Theory of Evolutionary Psychology asks: what's the evidence? How much cultural variation? Could the same data support different stories? Evolution happened, but the stories we tell about it reflect our present, not just our past. Critical theory examines the politics behind the prehistory."
The grindset is a contemporary ideology of self-exploitation disguised as strength, deeply tied to the aesthetics of the “sigma male” and to new digital forms of patriarchy. It promotes the idea that human worth depends on productivity, economic success, absolute emotional control, and the ability to work endlessly, turning vulnerability, rest, community, and tenderness into signs of weakness. Beneath its rhetoric of discipline and power often lies a profound inability to relate healthily to pain, fragility, and human interdependence.
“That’s the grindset, brother. While weak men sleep and complain, sigma males stay disciplined, work in silence, suppress emotions, and build power while everyone else wastes time chasing comfort.”
Grindset by Omega-Male May 22, 2026
Word of the Day on May 23, 2026
well known from south park
rednecks get angrry that future folk took there jobs so they yell
They took ouare jerbs!
Them future folk took ouare jerbs!
jerb by Jimberley Kim April 7, 2005
Word of the Day on May 22, 2026