Indeed we've been here beforepleiadian wrote:Maybe time for Redspear to adjust the Rescaling Experiment![]()

And of course that's very much what I'm up to... once again

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Indeed we've been here beforepleiadian wrote:Maybe time for Redspear to adjust the Rescaling Experiment![]()
You said I would be trading with mammals, damn it!
You were.
They had fins!
Yes, mammals with fins.
Mammals don't have fins and live in the %@$#ING OCEAN!
Fish, fish have fins!
If I'd known I'd have been trading with fish then I wouldn't have brought them 35 tons of %@$#ING BANANAS!.
... Er, mammals can have fins too.
I'm a trader not a scientist! When you tell me mammal it means a monkey. You got that? A %@$#ING MONKEY! ... a monkey or a dog...
Dammit.. you made me laugh 'til I choked..
Of course they are.. how else could one become Oolite's lead developer?
You know it makes sense
Did this ever materialise? And if not, what are your ideas?Disembodied wrote: ↑Wed Jul 15, 2009 1:23 pmI've got my own idea of where all these cats, frogs, rodents and so on all came from, one which I hope to get out in a piece of fiction in the not-too-distant future...
Briefly thought you were going somewhere completely different there...
Well it certainly helps on earth and one might expect it to elsewhere but remember that it's the manipulation they offer, not the thumbs themselves that grant the advantage.
I can't recall when but it was once suggested to me that the main reasons molluscs (including the octopus) did not evolve to a position comparable to mammals in general (and humans in particular) was as a consequence of their means of locumotion. An octopus 'arm' is in some ways superior to a human hand, at least under water (which includes more habitable space than does land on this planet).
That's what this thread needs, a profoundly serious question.Wildeblood wrote: ↑Mon May 19, 2025 10:34 pmKW and I just wonder whether catgirls count as humanoid or feline?
Yeah, it used to be that if they could breed and produce fertile offspring then they were regarded as the same species. Then it was noted that sometimes the female hybrids in particular could sometimes be fertile. So it's a bit more murky than that I'm afraid.Cholmondely wrote: ↑Mon May 19, 2025 10:58 pmI'd thought that "species" (as defined by Linnaeus or whomever) was to do with breeding. If two individuals can breed, then they are the same species. If not, not.