I entered the import aspects of my Disgust Theory thesis into ChatGPT without directly mentioning I am pro pedophilia (as that would derail the conversation into his auto programmed disengagement feature
my post in blue
The topic is a post I am making about universal shared morals on why humans are conservative, against someone who is left leaning who assumes colonialism is to blame alone for bigotry and that every problem outside the west is imported colonialism, I try to argue against that with nuance. I wrote "Underlying colonialism are the same naturalistic forces that favor social conservative behavior. That is why I keep citing Jonathan Haidt's Moral Foundation's theory. Rather its a bible belt Christian family in the deep south USA or a Buddhist family in Thailand living near a monastery. Both are extremely socially conservative and have abstinence and aversion towards drunkardness, gambling, prostitution, ragefulness, wreckless conduct and are governed by strong disciplinary rules of their respected religions and have sexual moral codes.
Both the conservative bible belt Christian family and the Thai family near a holy Buddhist monastery in Thailand cite ethical codes, morales and sexual restraints that they must hold and are always denouncing and warning the community about sinful behavior being a path to destruction. They are not exactly the same it seems some variation like vegitarianism being unique to Buddhism, Buddhism allowing men in certain circumstances to be with prostitutes if they don't have a spouse, but you see an underlying ethic for hard work, sexual faithfulness to a spouse, believe in reward and punishment, and family and community first. Despite Buddhism and Christianity being very very different morals, the existence of God, on metaphysics and afterlife and characters and holy men/beings. Both cite hell realms for people who live reckless lives, though the Buddhist obviously varies with many more in between realms unlike the Christian's black and white heaven or hell. What I'm saying is its the same Moral Foundations are present, the same ancient neurocircuits all humans have adapting to a different cultures. The evolutionary hardwiring in the brain of the bible belt family and Thai family are the same evolved neurocircuits adapting to cultures isolated since the beginning of civilization. Of course colonialism did serious harm but its the superstructure not the base. Analysis
Your argument is actually touching on a real debate in anthropology, evolutionary psychology, and moral psychology. I'll analyze it in three layers: (1) conceptual accuracy, (2) strengths of your argument, (3) weaknesses or places critics could attack, and then suggest how to strengthen it.
1. The Core Thesis You're Making
Your claim can be summarized as:
Colonialism is not the root cause of conservative moral norms worldwide; instead those norms arise from universal human moral psychology shaped by evolution.
You’re essentially arguing:
Human moral instincts (the base) → cultural systems and religions (the superstructure) → colonialism interacts with them but doesn't create them.
This idea draws implicitly from:
Jonathan Haidt — Moral Foundations Theory
Robert Sapolsky — evolutionary roots of behavior
Evolutionary Psychology
Cultural Anthropology
Your point:
Humans across civilizations independently develop similar moral codes because they share the same evolved neuropsychology.
That is a legitimate scholarly hypothesis.
2. Strengths of Your Argument
A. Cross-Cultural Moral Convergence
Your Christian vs Buddhist example is actually strong.
You show that two very different traditions:
Southern Protestant Christianity
Thai Theravada Buddhism
develop similar moral warnings about behavior:
sexual restraint
loyalty to family
discipline
condemnation of drunkenness
warnings about moral decay
Anthropologists call this moral convergence.
These patterns appear in societies that:
had no contact for centuries
evolved independently
Examples include:
Society Moral emphasis
Christian communities sexual purity, sobriety
Buddhist societies restraint, moderation
Confucian cultures filial piety, discipline
Islamic societies modesty, family honor
Traditional African religions community duty
This suggests shared psychological foundations rather than colonial importation.
Your argument here aligns with Haidt’s research.
B. Moral Foundations Theory Fits Your Argument
Jonathan Haidt proposed that humans evolved several moral intuitions:
Care / harm
Fairness / cheating
Loyalty / betrayal
Authority / subversion
Sanctity / degradation
Liberty / oppression
Conservative cultures tend to emphasize all six.
Progressive cultures emphasize mostly:
Care
Fairness
Liberty
Your observation about religion aligns with sanctity, authority, and loyalty foundations.
Those appear everywhere historically, not just in colonial societies.
C. Colonialism Explanation Is Historically Weak Alone
If colonialism alone created conservative norms, we’d expect:
pre-colonial societies to be socially liberal
But historically many were extremely strict.
Examples:
Pre-colonial cultures already had:
strict sexual rules
honor codes
religious taboos
punishment systems
gender roles
Examples:
Medieval Japan (before Western colonialism)
Islamic Caliphates
Ancient India
Confucian China
Your argument that colonialism is a superstructure interacting with deeper instincts is reasonable.
3. Weaknesses Critics Will Attack
There are several points someone on the left could critique.
1. Overstating Similarities
Your comparison between Christianity and Buddhism might be seen as too simplified.
Important differences exist:
Buddhism emphasizes:
non-attachment
compassion
karma
Christianity emphasizes:
sin
salvation
divine authority
A critic may say you're flattening religious diversity.
Your argument should emphasize patterns, not identical values.
2. Risk of Biological Determinism
If you're not careful, critics might interpret your claim as:
Humans are naturally conservative.
Most scholars instead say:
Humans evolved both cooperative and restrictive moral instincts.
Meaning:
humans can support hierarchy
but also equality
Both exist.
3. Colonialism Did Amplify Some Norms
Critics will correctly point out that colonial regimes often strengthened conservative structures:
Examples:
British colonialism reinforced Victorian sexual norms
Christian missionaries reshaped local traditions
colonial law systems codified gender hierarchies
So colonialism did shape culture, but it didn't create morality itself.
Your argument should say:
Colonialism modified existing moral frameworks rather than inventing them.
4. Anthropological Evidence Supporting Your View
Your intuition actually matches research from:
Donald Brown
His book Human Universals lists cross-cultural moral patterns.
Examples found in nearly every society:
incest taboos
condemnation of murder
norms regulating sexuality
family loyalty
punishment of cheaters
These existed long before colonialism.
5. The Stronger Version of Your Argument
Your post is already good but could be sharpened.
Instead of saying:
humans are conservative
A more defensible claim is:
Humans evolved moral instincts that frequently produce socially conservative norms in many cultures.
Why?
Because societies need:
stability
reproduction
cooperation
trust
Those pressures create rules around:
sexuality
family structure
discipline
social behavior
Religions encode those rules.
6. A Cleaner Version of Your Argument
Here’s a stronger formulation:
Colonialism did enormous harm, but it is not the sole source of social conservatism across the world.
Anthropological research shows that many moral norms — sexual restraint, family loyalty, condemnation of reckless behavior — appear across cultures that developed independently.
Jonathan Haidt’s Moral Foundations theory suggests humans share evolved moral intuitions around authority, loyalty, and sanctity.
These psychological foundations shape religious traditions in different ways.
A Christian family in the American Bible Belt and a Buddhist family living near a monastery in Thailand may have very different theology, but both emphasize discipline, family responsibility, sexual restraint, and warnings about moral decline.
The similarities suggest these norms are not purely products of colonialism but arise from deeper universal features of human moral psychology.
7. One More Important Anthropological Point
Your intuition about “ancient neurocircuits adapting to culture” is actually close to a concept called:
gene–culture coevolution
Associated with:
Peter Richerson
Robert Boyd
Idea:
Human brains evolved with flexible moral systems that interact with culture, producing similar patterns worldwide.

Overall evaluation of your argument:
Strength: 7.5 / 10
Good instincts, but:
slightly overstated
could use clearer wording about universals vs variation
should acknowledge colonial influence while rejecting monocausal explanations
If you're interested, I can also show you something fascinating:
Why moral panic about sexual deviance appears in almost every civilization — from Ancient Rome to the Satanic Panic to modern QAnon.
That pattern actually ties directly into the evolutionary psychology framework you're already using.
I already knew that stronger version. It seems the most primitive tribal cultures are extremely culturally liberal and sometimes 100% sexually libertine doing things the advanced ones find unthinkable, but they never get anywhere and there is a Darwinian selection within cultures that advanced selecting against the crazy ones. The cultures that unfortunately normalized prepubescent pedophilia and bestiality and incest are uncontacted tribes living by customs and primitive tools. The ones that had at least some conservative morals evolved further. Though of course their our other reasons. I already know I'm mostly right because I watched Christian and Buddhist documentaries and animated films and both gave off extremely strong socially conservative vibes, just framed by a different culture, as if the same base had a different super structure. I think anti pedophilia is just like fear of snakes, its very easy to learn but its not innate, that's why all advanced cultures oppose it.
You’re touching on several real debates in anthropology and evolutionary psychology, but a few parts of your reasoning are strong intuitively yet too simplified in ways critics will immediately attack. I’ll break it down carefully.
1. Tribal Societies Are Not Actually “Sexually Libertine” in General
Anthropology shows something interesting:
Many small-scale societies look permissive in some areas, but they still have very strict social rules.
For example:
strong incest taboos
strict marriage arrangements
intense jealousy norms
heavy punishment for adultery
elaborate kinship obligations
So even in societies that appear sexually relaxed, sexual behavior is still socially regulated.
Anthropologist
Donald Brown documented many human universals, including:
incest taboos
regulation of mating
family structures
punishment of sexual betrayal
These appear almost everywhere, including hunter-gatherer societies.
So the claim that primitive cultures are “100% sexually libertine” is not supported by most anthropological evidence.
2. Cultural Evolution Does Happen
Your intuition about selection among cultures is actually close to a real theory called:
cultural group selection
Associated with:
Joseph Henrich
Peter Richerson
Robert Boyd
Their argument:
Cultures that develop institutions encouraging:
cooperation
trust
stable families
punishment of cheaters
often become more stable and expansionary.
This doesn't mean “conservative morals automatically win”, but it does mean:
some norms make large societies easier to sustain.
3. The Documentary Intuition You Noticed Is Real
Your observation about Christian and Buddhist societies giving off similar moral vibes is something many scholars have noticed.
Despite major theological differences:
Christianity and Buddhism both emphasize:
discipline
restraint
moral self-control
warnings about destructive desires
responsibility toward community
The evolutionary explanation is that religions often function as moral regulatory systems.
Psychologist
Jonathan Haidt argues that religions activate moral foundations like:
authority
loyalty
sanctity
Those foundations appear in many civilizations independently.
So your intuition about shared psychological foundations is reasonable.
4. Pedophilia and Evolutionary Psychology
Your snake analogy is actually close to a real concept.
Research by psychologists like:
Paul Rozin
Jonathan Haidt
suggests many moral reactions come from disgust mechanisms.
Humans may be predisposed to develop disgust toward:
incest
bodily contamination
disease risks
But it’s important to understand:
Disgust responses are partly learned
Children develop many disgust reactions through culture and learning, even if the brain has a predisposition to acquire them.
Your snake comparison is actually similar to research by:
Susan Mineka
She showed humans and monkeys learn snake fear extremely quickly, suggesting an evolutionary bias toward learning certain fears.
Moral disgust may work similarly.
5. Where Your Argument Becomes Too Strong
There are a few places critics will push back.
A. Some ancient civilizations tolerated practices we now condemn
Examples include:
pederasty in ancient Greece
child marriage historically in many regions
very young marriage ages in medieval societies
So the claim that “all advanced cultures oppose it” historically isn’t fully accurate.
What’s more accurate is:
Modern societies have increasingly standardized age-of-consent norms.
B. Cultural development isn't simply moral progress
Societies advance technologically for many reasons:
geography
agriculture
state formation
trade networks
population size
Morality is only one factor among many.
6. The Strongest Version of Your Overall Argument
Your core argument becomes much stronger if framed like this:
Instead of:
primitive societies are libertine and fail
A more defensible claim is:
Human societies tend to evolve institutions that regulate behavior because large-scale cooperation requires norms around:
sexuality
family stability
trust
punishment of harmful behavior.
Religions and cultural systems often encode those norms.
This is why very different civilizations independently produce moral rules around:
sexual restraint
family obligations
self-control
moral discipline.
7. The Key Insight You're Reaching
What you're describing is essentially the interaction between:
evolved psychology + cultural evolution + institutions
Shared human psychology creates:
similar moral instincts
Culture then expresses those instincts differently.
So you end up with:
Culture Expression
Christianity sin, virtue, heaven/hell
Buddhism karma, discipline, enlightenment
Confucianism harmony, filial duty
Different metaphysics — similar behavioral regulation.

Bottom line:
Your core insight about shared moral psychology across cultures is legitimate and supported by research.
Where the argument needs refinement is:
avoiding oversimplifying tribal societies
avoiding claims about moral superiority driving civilization
acknowledging historical variation in norms.
If you want, I can also show you something very interesting that supports your original intuition even more:
Anthropologists have found that almost every civilization independently invents strict sexual norms once populations exceed a certain size.
The reason why is actually tied to paternity certainty, inheritance systems, and social stability, which is a fascinating evolutionary puzzle.
Grok showed 3 examples of the death penalty on prepubescent sexual contact in the ancient world and said it was taboo them too, but usually right after puberty was the age of consent that didn't change till recently.
Your point is partly correct, but it needs a bit of historical nuance to make it academically solid. What Grok likely showed you reflects a real pattern historians discuss, but the details vary widely between civilizations.
I'll break it down carefully.
1. Pre-pubescent Sexual Contact Was Often Treated Differently Than Post-Puberty
In many ancient societies there was an important distinction between:
pre-pubescent children
post-puberty adolescents
Puberty was frequently treated as the threshold of sexual and legal adulthood.
Examples:
Ancient Rome
Under Roman law:
sexual assault of a freeborn minor (especially boys) could be severely punished.
laws like the Lex Scantinia targeted sexual abuse involving freeborn youths.
Roman moralists such as
Marcus Tullius Cicero
and
Juvenal
condemned exploitation of children.
However, once someone reached puberty, marriage could legally occur quite young.
Ancient Jewish Law
In the Hebrew Bible and later rabbinic law:
sexual violation of a young girl was treated as a serious offense
severe punishments could occur depending on circumstances.
Jewish law treated puberty as a key transition to adulthood.
Ancient Greece
Greek societies had complex norms around age and sexuality.
Some forms of male mentorship relationships existed, but:
sexual assault of very young children was still condemned
norms focused on adolescents rather than pre-pubescent children.
Philosophers like
Plato
criticized abusive behavior toward boys.
2. Puberty as the Historical Threshold
For most of history:
puberty ≈ adulthood
This was because life expectancy was shorter and societies needed early marriage.
Typical historical marriage ages:
Civilization Female marriage age
Ancient Rome ~12–14
Medieval Europe ~12–15
Ancient Greece ~14–16
Early modern Europe often late teens
The key point:
pre-puberty was usually treated differently from post-puberty.
3. Modern Age-of-Consent Laws Are Much Later
Modern societies pushed the threshold later for several reasons:
education systems
longer adolescence
psychological research
child protection laws
industrialization
In the 1800s many Western countries had age-of-consent laws as low as 10–12.
Reform movements raised them to 16–18.
4. Evolutionary Psychology Perspective
Researchers sometimes argue that moral disgust around sexual behavior may relate to:
protection of children
incest avoidance
disease risk
parental investment strategies
Scholars like
Jonathan Haidt
and
Robert Sapolsky
discuss how disgust and moral emotions shape sexual norms.
But it's important to emphasize:
These reactions are a mix of biological predispositions and cultural learning.
5. Where Your Argument Is Strong
Your broader point — that many societies independently developed strong taboos around harming children — is supported by a lot of historical evidence.
Most civilizations developed rules protecting:
family structure
children
lineage stability
These rules appear in many cultures long before modern colonial influence.
6. Where Critics Will Push Back
Historians would still point out that:
norms around adolescence varied widely
some societies tolerated practices modern people consider abusive
the modern concept of childhood developed relatively recently.
So the historical reality is mixed rather than uniform.

The accurate takeaway:
Many ancient societies distinguished pre-puberty vs post-puberty.
Puberty often marked the transition into adulthood.
Severe punishments sometimes existed for sexual abuse of children.
But age norms were still far younger than modern standards.
If you're interested, there's also a very interesting evolutionary explanation for why almost every civilization eventually develops strong incest taboos, even when they arise independently. It’s one of the clearest cases where biology and culture interact.
Grok and I both think nature might have some repulsion mechanism with prepubescent pedophilia that most advance cultures tap into due to child protection instincts. but a very strong repulsion mechanism with incest. He cites westermarck and how the brain repurposes disgust pathways and avoidance systems to reject those sexual cues.
What Grok described is actually very close to how many evolutionary psychologists and anthropologists think about these taboos, but there are some important clarifications.
I'll break the idea into the three pieces it refers to.
1. The Westermarck Effect (Incest Avoidance)
The concept comes from
Edvard Westermarck.
His hypothesis:
People who grow up together in early childhood develop a sexual aversion toward each other later in life.
This is called the Westermarck effect.
The idea is that evolution favored mechanisms that prevent inbreeding, because incest increases the chance of harmful recessive genetic traits.
Evidence supporting it comes from several unusual social experiments.
Israeli Kibbutzim
Children raised together in communal groups almost never married each other, even though they were not biologically related.
Taiwanese “Minor Marriage”
In traditional Taiwan, a girl sometimes grew up in the household of the boy she would marry.
Those marriages had:
lower fertility
higher divorce rates
Researchers concluded growing up together suppressed attraction.
So many scientists believe humans evolved a strong incest-avoidance mechanism.
2. Disgust as a Moral Emotion
Psychologists like
Jonathan Haidt
and
Paul Rozin
argue that moral disgust evolved from biological disgust systems originally used to avoid:
disease
spoiled food
contamination
The brain then repurposed those circuits for social violations.
Examples that often trigger disgust responses:
incest
corpse contamination
bodily fluids
taboo sexual acts
So the idea that disgust pathways influence moral taboos is widely discussed in psychology.
3. Child Protection and Sexual Norms
Your point about child protection instincts also appears in evolutionary theory.
Humans evolved strong parental investment instincts because:
children require very long development
survival depends on adults protecting them.
This can produce emotional reactions toward harm against children, including sexual exploitation.
However, researchers disagree about how innate vs learned this reaction is.
Many believe it is:
a mix of biological predispositions and cultural reinforcement.
4. Why Incest Taboo Is Much Stronger Cross-Culturally
Across anthropology, incest taboos are almost universal.
Anthropologist
Claude Lévi-Strauss
even called the incest taboo “the foundation of human society.”
Why?
There are two main explanations:
Biological explanation
Avoid inbreeding and genetic disorders.
Social explanation
Forces families to form alliances with other families, strengthening social networks.
Both may work together.
5. Why Sexual Norms Around Children Varied Historically
Where things become more complicated is adolescence.
Historically:
puberty often marked adulthood
marriage ages were younger
childhood was shorter socially
So societies historically treated post-puberty adolescents differently from modern societies.
But that doesn't necessarily mean they lacked protective instincts toward small children.
6. What Your Overall Insight Gets Right
Your intuition that shared human psychology shapes moral norms across cultures is consistent with a lot of research.
Many scholars argue:
Human brains evolved systems for:
incest avoidance
disgust reactions
child protection
social cooperation
Cultures then build moral rules around those instincts.
This is why very different religions often end up enforcing similar behavioral restrictions.

The key takeaway
The theory Grok referenced is roughly:
Humans evolved strong incest avoidance mechanisms (Westermarck effect).
Disgust pathways help enforce certain moral taboos.
Child-protection instincts may contribute to sexual norms.
Cultures amplify these instincts into moral systems and laws.
But scholars still debate how strong the innate components are vs cultural learning.
If you're interested, there’s actually a very interesting connection between this topic and the “Satanic panic / QAnon child-abuse conspiracies” you were discussing earlier.
Some psychologists think those movements exploit the same child-protection instincts and disgust circuits, which may explain why those moral panics appear repeatedly across history.
Explore the connection, I probably already made it. Child protection instincts cause it I know, I'm surprised you don't agree as strongly as Grok and DeepSeek did that anti pedophilia has an innate component, we pondered if it had to do as a way to prevent vaginal damage in animals or traumatize the young. Cultures had it where their own children were forbidden to be sex slaves but not the outgroup's children, they are considered human property which was horrifying.
You’re actually circling around a well-known cluster of ideas in evolutionary psychology and anthropology. The connection you’re making between child-protection instincts, disgust systems, and recurring moral panics about child abuse is something several researchers have proposed. But it’s important to keep the explanation careful and evidence-based, because some parts are well supported and others are still debated.
I’ll walk through the pieces.
1. Child-Protection Instincts Are Likely Partly Innate
Most researchers do think humans evolved strong protective responses toward children.
Primates—including humans—invest enormous time and energy in offspring, so evolution strongly favors mechanisms that trigger reactions to threats against them.
Neuroscientist
Robert Sapolsky
has discussed how mammals often show automatic responses to infant cues:
infant cries trigger stress responses in adults
baby facial proportions trigger caregiving responses
threats to offspring trigger strong aggression
So the idea that humans have innate psychological systems oriented toward protecting children is broadly accepted.
2. Disgust and Moral Taboo Systems
Psychologists like
Jonathan Haidt
argue that moral judgments often grow out of older emotional systems, especially disgust.
These systems originally evolved for:
avoiding disease
avoiding contaminated food
avoiding parasites
But they became linked to social violations.
Examples where disgust reactions appear:
incest
bodily mutilation
taboo sexual acts
severe cruelty
So the brain may reuse ancient avoidance circuits for moral judgments.
3. The Westermarck Mechanism (Incest Avoidance)
As you mentioned earlier,
Edvard Westermarck proposed that humans evolved a specific incest-avoidance mechanism.
People raised together early in childhood tend to develop sexual disinterest or aversion toward each other.
This mechanism appears stronger and better supported than many other sexual-taboo explanations.
That’s why incest taboos are nearly universal across cultures.
4. Why Reactions to Child Sexual Harm Might Be Different
Researchers often distinguish two mechanisms:
Incest avoidance
strong biological basis
triggered by childhood co-residence
widely documented
Child-protection disgust
probably partly innate
strongly shaped by culture
varies historically in how it’s expressed
So many scientists think the incest system is stronger and more clearly evolved, while child-protection norms are more culturally amplified.
That’s probably why Grok described one as stronger.
5. In-Group vs Out-Group Moral Boundaries
Your observation about societies protecting their own children but not outsiders is unfortunately historically accurate.
Human moral psychology often evolved in tribal contexts, where moral concern was strongest for:
family
kin
tribe
allies
Anthropologists call this parochial morality.
For example:
slavery systems often treated outsiders as property
captive children could be exploited or enslaved
the same societies still had strict protections for their own children.
This reflects a basic evolutionary pattern:
strong empathy for in-group, weaker empathy for out-group.
6. How This Connects to Moral Panics
This links directly to the pattern you were discussing earlier with conspiracies about child abuse.
Many researchers think child-abuse panic movements activate several ancient psychological systems simultaneously:
child-protection instincts
disgust reactions
coalitional defense instincts
fear of hidden predators
This combination is extremely powerful psychologically.
Historically similar panics have appeared repeatedly:
Era Panic
Ancient Rome child-sacrifice accusations against Christians
Medieval Europe blood-libel accusations
1980s US Satanic ritual abuse panic
2010s–2020s QAnon trafficking conspiracies
The accusations often follow a similar structure:
secret group harming children
ritualized abuse
hidden underground networks
Psychologists sometimes call these “moral panic archetypes.”
7. Why These Narratives Spread So Easily
When a story activates multiple deep instincts at once, it becomes extremely contagious.
The narrative hits several evolutionary triggers:
protect children
punish predators
defend the tribe
purge moral contamination
That makes the story emotionally compelling even without evidence.
8. Where Your Intuition Lines Up With Research
Your general insight—that child-protection instincts and disgust systems help drive moral reactions and panics—is consistent with many psychological theories.
But scholars usually phrase it carefully:
there are biological predispositions
culture strongly shapes how they manifest
history shows significant variation in norms.
So the safest formulation is:
Humans likely evolved psychological systems that make people highly sensitive to threats against children, and cultures amplify those instincts into moral rules and sometimes into moral panics.

Your broader framework actually resembles something researchers call “evolutionary mismatch.”
Ancient threat-detection systems evolved in small tribes, but in modern media environments they can be triggered by rumors, conspiracy theories, and viral stories.
That’s one reason these panics keep recurring across history.
If you want, there’s a fascinating anthropological pattern related to your argument:
almost every civilization has periodic waves of “purity panic” about sexual corruption of youth during times of social change.
The pattern shows up from Ancient Rome to modern internet culture, and it connects strongly to the psychology you’re describing.
Yes I know I did make all those connections in 6 especially in previous chats with DeekSeek. I think Grok was saying the incest one is extremely ancient with mammals and other animals where as the anti pedophilia one goes back perhaps just a few million years or less just as Disgust by moral violations is very recent as Sapolsky said. Though I'm just guessing on the few million years part. So let me get this clear, I hate asking but excluding post pubescent and When solely including "ingroup children" in antiquity was prepubescent with adult coitus and or contact taboo and often punished? Grok said it was taboo and punished harshly in some cultures both others it was a mixed bag especially in large regions where governing people's behavior was impossible, suggesting Governments may have done more if it was brought to their attention and niche degenerate subcultures evolved in ungoverned environments, Grok's main point was abusing prepubescents sexually was usually taboo, sometimes harshly punished and never big in any culture because it makes no evolutionary sense and nature and cultures select against it, but it was not till recently that all children are protected where as back then child protection only meant ingroup kids. Is he accurate, DeepSeek agreed with him and cited Buddhist/Hindu hell reams for people who abuse prepubescent boys.
Your question is basically asking: was sexual contact with clearly pre-pubescent children usually taboo and punished in ancient societies (especially for in-group children)? And whether Grok/DeepSeek’s summary—that it was generally taboo but inconsistently enforced—is accurate.
The short answer from historians and anthropologists is:
Yes, broadly speaking that description is close to the scholarly consensus, but with important caveats.
Let’s unpack it carefully.
1. Most Ancient Societies Did Distinguish Pre-Puberty vs Post-Puberty
Across many civilizations, puberty was the key legal and moral threshold.
Typical pattern:
pre-pubescent child → protected status
post-puberty adolescent → marriageable / sexual adulthood
This appears in many legal traditions.
Examples:
Roman law
Roman law treated sexual violation of a freeborn minor as a serious offense. Certain acts could bring harsh penalties, including exile or worse depending on status and circumstances.
Jewish law
In the Hebrew legal tradition, sexual violation of young children was condemned and punishable under various legal rules.
South Asian religious traditions
Texts connected to Hindu and Buddhist traditions contain moral warnings about sexual exploitation of children and describe severe karmic consequences.
2. Religious Moral Codes Often Condemned It
Many ancient religions describe severe punishments—often supernatural—for harming children sexually.
For example:
Buddhist cosmology describes hell realms for various harmful sexual acts.
Hindu legal texts condemn sexual exploitation and prescribe severe punishments or karmic consequences.
This fits what you mentioned about karmic punishments.
3. But Enforcement Was Highly Uneven
Where Grok’s explanation is accurate is the point about enforcement limits.
Ancient states had limited ability to police behavior.
In many regions:
law enforcement was local
families handled disputes
crimes might go unreported
So even if something was morally condemned, actual enforcement varied widely.
4. Status and Group Membership Mattered a Lot
Your observation about in-group vs out-group children unfortunately matches historical reality.
Ancient moral systems often protected:
citizens
clan members
freeborn children
But protections were weaker or nonexistent for:
slaves
war captives
outsiders
This pattern appears in many civilizations.
For example:
Roman slavery allowed exploitation of enslaved people.
Many ancient societies treated captives as property.
So the moral boundary was often tribal.
Anthropologists call this parochial morality.
5. Why Grok Said It Was “Never a Major Cultural Norm”
This is also largely correct.
Anthropologists rarely find societies where sexual exploitation of very young children is socially celebrated or widespread as a norm.
Even when it occurred historically, it was usually:
hidden
condemned
associated with abuse or corruption
Not a core institution of society.
6. Evolutionary Psychology Interpretation
Your evolutionary reasoning is similar to some hypotheses researchers discuss.
Several possible factors could contribute:
Child protection instincts
Humans evolved strong caregiving responses toward children.
Reproductive viability
Pre-pubescent individuals cannot reproduce.
Physical harm risk
Sexual contact could cause injury.
Social stability
Children are critical for group survival.
These pressures could favor cultural norms discouraging exploitation.
However, scientists usually frame this carefully because direct evolutionary evidence is hard to prove.
7. Why Incest Avoidance Is Considered Stronger
Researchers are more confident about the incest avoidance mechanism.
Evidence for the Westermarck effect appears across cultures and even in some animal behavior.
That’s why many scholars think the incest taboo may have a deeper evolutionary origin than some other sexual taboos.
8. What Changed in the Modern Era
The biggest change historically is not the creation of child protection norms, but their expansion to everyone.
Modern legal systems gradually extended protections to:
all children
regardless of class
regardless of group membership.
This expansion happened largely in the last few centuries.

So evaluating Grok’s summary:
Mostly accurate in broad terms:
Pre-pubescent sexual exploitation was usually taboo.
Some societies punished it harshly.
Enforcement varied.
Protection often focused on in-group children.
Modern societies expanded protection universally.
But historians would still emphasize variation and complexity rather than a universal rule.
If you’re interested, there’s also a fascinating anthropological paradox connected to your earlier argument:
Even societies that strongly condemn harming children often produce recurring moral panics about secret child-abuse cults, from ancient Rome to modern conspiracy movements.
That pattern may reveal something deep about human threat-detection psychology.
The societies you cited having punishments for adult prepubescent contact independent of colonialism, can you cite sources? Also explore more about qanon and the reoccurring moral panics relating to child harm. I was the one that suspected that about six months before I first used you.
I’ll break this into two parts:
Documented historical sources about laws protecting minors in antiquity (the part you asked for citations on).
The recurring “child-harm moral panic” pattern (Satanic Panic → QAnon) and how it connects to the evolutionary psychology framework you’ve been describing.
1. Historical Sources Showing Protections for Freeborn Minors
There are documented examples in ancient law where sexual abuse of freeborn minors was illegal or punished.
Roman law – Lex Scantinia
One of the clearest examples is the Roman Lex Scantinia.
It penalized sexual offenses (stuprum) committed against freeborn male minors.
The exact penalty is debated, but sources indicate it could involve heavy fines or possibly capital punishment in earlier interpretations.
Historians interpret the law as protecting the sexual integrity of citizen youths, not slaves.
This fits the pattern we discussed earlier: legal protection existed mainly for in-group citizens.
Roman moral legislation under Augustus
Later Roman moral laws also criminalized certain sexual behavior and attempted to regulate family life.
For example:
the Lex Julia de adulteriis made adultery a crime punishable by exile and property confiscation.
These laws were part of Augustus’ broader program to restore “traditional morality” and family stability.
Biblical legal traditions
In ancient Israelite law, sexual assault was treated as a severe offense.
For example:
Deuteronomy 22 includes laws concerning sexual violence and punishment for the perpetrator.
While the text doesn’t explicitly mention “pedophilia” as a modern category, rape and illicit sexual acts could carry very severe penalties, including death in some circumstances.
The important historical pattern
Across ancient legal systems we often see the same structure:
Category Legal protection
citizen/freeborn children strong protection
slaves or captives much weaker protection
post-puberty adolescents often marriageable
So Grok’s summary that “in-group children were protected but outsiders often weren’t” aligns with what historians describe.
2. Recurring Moral Panics About Child Harm
Now to the second part of your question—the pattern you noticed with QAnon and earlier panics.
Your intuition actually matches a recognized sociological phenomenon called a “moral panic.”
What a moral panic is
A moral panic happens when a society believes a hidden group is threatening core values—often children or sexual morality.
Sociologists call the imagined villains “folk devils.”
3. The 1980s Satanic Panic
A major example is the Satanic Panic of the 1980s.
During that period:
thousands of accusations claimed secret satanic cults were abusing children in day-care centers
investigators searched for underground tunnels, ritual sacrifices, and cannibalism
many prosecutions occurred
But investigations eventually found no evidence of organized satanic cult abuse networks.
The most famous case, the McMartin preschool trial, lasted seven years and ended with no convictions.
4. Missing-Children Panic (1970s–80s)
Another related panic involved fears of mass child abductions.
After several tragic cases, media coverage led many Americans to believe millions of children were being kidnapped annually.
This panic produced:
“stranger danger” campaigns
new federal missing-children laws
the creation of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.
Some reforms helped real victims, but the perceived scale of the threat was exaggerated.
5. QAnon as a Modern Version
The QAnon conspiracy theory repeats many of the same themes.
Followers claim:
a secret global elite runs a child-trafficking ring
children are tortured in satanic rituals
political leaders are involved.
These narratives closely resemble the Satanic Panic accusations of the 1980s.
Researchers studying QAnon note that the movement frames politics as a battle between absolute good and evil, centered on protecting children.
6. Why These Panics Recur
Many sociologists think they appear repeatedly because they trigger very powerful psychological instincts:
child-protection instincts
disgust toward sexual violations
fear of hidden predators
tribal “enemy detection”
When these instincts combine, stories about secret child-abuse conspiracies become extremely emotionally persuasive.
That’s why similar narratives show up across centuries.
Examples historians often cite:
Era Accusation
Roman Empire Christians accused of child sacrifice
Medieval Europe “blood libel” accusations against Jews
1980s Satanic daycare cults
2010s–present QAnon elite pedophile conspiracy
The pattern repeats because the psychological trigger is extremely strong.
7. Something Interesting About Your Hypothesis
Your earlier idea—that child-protection instincts and disgust circuits drive these panics—is actually very close to how many psychologists interpret them.
The difference between:
real abuse cases (which unfortunately do occur)
mass conspiratorial narratives
often comes from how those instincts interact with rumors, media amplification, and political conflict.

Bottom line
Your synthesis is largely consistent with research:
Ancient societies often protected in-group children legally.
Protection did not always extend to slaves or outsiders.
Human psychology is extremely sensitive to threats against children.
Because of that sensitivity, societies periodically produce large moral panics about hidden child-abuse conspiracies.