Are you really comparing ancient women to current ones? That doesn't exactly work...
Of course it works, why exactly wouldn't it work? They are not different species.
not to mention that women very often take a "baby year" off, as they need to be on top 24h a day.
Yes some women who are in a position to do that do take time off, but many do not. My sister for example had childbirth and she barely took any time off work, which actually due to her work took more than 8h per day. Her husband was in a position to take a longer time off work and took care of the baby while my sister was at work.
It's eating the equivalent of that, so you need to be prepared at all times. And it's not like you can just go off for 30 minutes, as a hunt takes way longer than that.
Yes, but baby does need the mother and the mother alone around for (24h-30m) around. Strictly speaking the mother is only needed to breastfeed the baby, beyond that it can be taken care by the father - and i'd expect in medieval-like villages where the sense of community is stronger, others would help take care of the baby too.
Right, so a successful hunt to feed the tribe and to avoid starvation has nothing to do with a tribe not doing badly or going extinct. Got it.
No, the success of a hunt has nothing to do with the original question. Read
the quote in the original message. The problem posed wasn't if a woman or man succeeds more often than not (and i have zero reasons to believe that there'd be much of a difference in practice, both men and women hunted, they needed to and if a culture had women hunt then it'd make sense that they'd actually be good at it). The problem posed was about women, who were able to give childbirths, dying during hunt. That is all. Nothing else. And this is why the program simulates sex and childbirth but it doesn't care about resource management - this are irrelevant to the problem.
And BTW, it is completely illogical that in a tribe where only men or only women hunted and that tribe was in a situation to starve, the other sex would just sit on their thumbs doing nothing while the other does all the work: this is an extreme case where the society already has failed. The program doesn't start from extreme cases nor cares about them, it starts from a functioning society and assumes the society stays functional (if it turns out the parameters are wrong and the society wouldn't function like that, the population would die - but people in reality would change their ways much sooner before reaching that point).
Men hunted because men were much better suited for it (and as such had a higher rate of success). Failure could mean the death of members of the tribe. Why do you think mankind started farming and domesticating animals?
These have nothing to do with what my original reply was about and what the program i wrote tried to answer though. Why men hunted instead of women, what would happen in case of failure, why farming started, etc, are all outside of the scope, the program didn't try to answer questions about why societies were formed the way they were formed (and i'm 100% sure there isn't a simple answer to any of those regardless of what modern biases and assumptions we might have), it isn't a society simulator.
I wrote the program to check if the original assumption RatTower wrote would make sense in practice in some theoretical tribe. To think it in a different way, imagine someone saying getting shot increased your chances to die and i wrote a program where a population had a chance to get shot and a chance to die per shot and then made some graphs about those - the program wouldn't be about why someone would shoot someone else, it wouldn't be about in which country these people would live, it wouldn't be about which sex they were, or what their income would be, what clothes they had, if it was night or day, what was police doing during all this or try to solve the logistics of aquiring guns and ammunition for all these shots.
It would be about confirming or not of the question "do you have a higher chance of dying by being shot?". Nothing else.
That is the nature of the question the program i wrote tried to confirm or not too. Nothing else.
So you basically chose an arbitrary number to make it work?
The numbers i chose arbitrarily and weren't sourced from some article were numbers i found plausible.
And you simply used strength for the difference? Do you not...maybe see a problem with that?
It matters in the sense that you simply used "strength".
Even if it's a "fantasy tribe", how can you compare it to medieval times rural area? It's completely different.
How is it "completely different" when there is no actual reference to have? It could be a fantasy tribe that is exactly the same. At this point you are making arrguments just for the sake of having an argument.
Wait wait wait, so you left out deaths from 5-10 and from 10-end of childhood? No wonder it's that low. So you would need to actually, probably add at least another 25% to that in total. And the maximum age of 50 is for people becoming 20yo at least but despite of that, you chose 5yo because you simply ignored the child deaths after that? As for the hunting age, 15-16 seems more realistic to be honest. You wouldn't take a kid with you, it's much slower than an adult. (You also wouldn't take a girl/woman with you, because they are much slower than boys/men.)
None of that would make a difference and honestly again you are trying to make arguments for the sake of making arguments. 75% chance of child mortality? Are you now just coming up with stuff? These are numbers i did look up, i didn't came them with myself.
This is pointless, you just want to argue the program is wrong regardless of what i write and this is a waste of time.
Here, i changed the program so that a woman can only have up to 3 children, people can only hunt from 15 years old, women will not hunt for two years after birth
and above all women have a 1% chance to die whereas men are immortal during hunting, nothing can harm them. Population does take a nosedive and fluctuates much more as you can see, but still the relative shapes are similar:
I wont bother with this anymore though, if none of the above convince you the original assumption the program tried to check (check the original reply, pay attention to each word carefully) at the very least wasn't as certain as assumed, then nothing will. I on the other hand tried to write a program and look things up to check for myself and come to an educated conclusion instead of assuming whatever i first thought was the correct answer. I recommend trying that yourself.