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Conclusions

Time prevented us from discussing the full range of subjects that we had hoped, and we settled for two each. Jake’s August subject was on monkeys’ former inhabitation of Europe and how, driven irrecoverably south by glaciation, they no longer walk the continent. He dove deeper into the subject, researching the spread of primates from continent to continent, with fascinating results. A fantastical string of rafting events enabled their propagation, bringing into question what species could have been with greater luck. We transitioned to a discussion of my first item: the human bottleneck. We agreed that the implications for the exploration of the human genome were profound, and that there was a kind of romantic human exceptionalism about the extreme resilience of the species.

We discussed separately a Jake’s September subject was Dogor, an 18,000-year-old canine wrested from the Siberian permafrost in 2018. Its unique genetics placed it in a gray area between wolf and dog, and it provided an interesting fixture in our ongoing conversations about evolution. On my Mormon Church subject, we agreed that history tends to happen in series of larger trends—Joseph Smith having ridden the Second Great Awakening—and sought a more holistic view of the human past. We admired the transcension of conventional religion that early America had surpassed and lamented its return to dogma, questioning whether a Fifth Great Awakening would strike in our lifetimes.