Originally posted by OwlHoot
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Reply to: The Human Genome and evolution
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Previously on "The Human Genome and evolution"
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Originally posted by OwlHoot View PostSounds like a post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy.
It's more likely the father's voice got much louder after he went mutt & jeff, and that affected his kids' hearing (at an early age, when their eardrums were perhaps more sensitive than the older siblings')
P.S. No doubt sasguru will be along shortly, to explain what a village idiot I am.
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Originally posted by alreadypacked View Post
I think this is possible.
Family I know, father worked in a factory that damaged his hearing. Children born before he worked in factory ok, thoes born after have hearing problems.
It's more likely the father's voice got much louder after he went mutt & jeff, and that affected his kids' hearing (at an early age, when their eardrums were perhaps more sensitive than the older siblings')
P.S. No doubt sasguru will be along shortly, to explain what a village idiot I am.Last edited by OwlHoot; 4 October 2010, 18:28.
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Originally posted by minestrone View PostI once asked if Camels with long eyelashes were 0.0000000001% more able to breed to make camels with onger eyelashes or if there was something that said "yes the last design was working out OK but could we have longer eyelashes 'cos the sand is terrible in that desert".
Never got an answer.
HTH
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I once asked if Camels with long eyelashes were 0.0000000001% more able to breed to make camels with onger eyelashes or if there was something that said "yes the last design was working out OK but could we have longer eyelashes 'cos the sand is terrible in that desert".
Never got an answer.
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View PostI was reading a magazine article last week about the genome.
Apparently all of the known functions that create a human account for a small fraction of the dna, and no one knows what the rest is for. yet.
One of the working theories is that part of the unknown dna is used for enviromentaly driven evolution, which seems to go against the orthodox view on how evolution works.
for example, if enviromental evolution is true, a skinny guy who comes from a skinny line, then becomes a blacksmith, he could father boys with big muscly bodies.
interesting
Lysenkoism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It's all to do with yer inprinting on genes and stuff see?
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Postit's weird isnt it. it means that instead of a change taking many generations to spread through a population, it could happen in less than one. which is, in effect , immediate.
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Postit's weird isnt it. it means that instead of a change taking many generations to spread through a population, it could happen in less than one. which is, in effect , immediate.
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Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostWas the magazine called Lamarckism monthly?
Imagine how difficult it would be to code environmental factors into DNA. The DNA would have to understand itself, and if it got too clever might decide it best that the blacksmith's son were born a bacteria. 3 arms at the very least.
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Originally posted by Pondlife View PostIt's true.
First kid is white and pastey looking just lke I am. The second one conceived about the time the wife went to Greece with the girls has much darker skin and looks positively mediterranean.
(this isn't true of course.)
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It's true.
First kid is white and pastey looking just lke I am. The second one conceived about the time the wife went to Greece with the girls has much darker skin and looks positively mediterranean.
(this isn't true of course.)
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Was the magazine called Lamarckism monthly?
Imagine how difficult it would be to code environmental factors into DNA. The DNA would have to understand itself, and if it got too clever might decide it best that the blacksmith's son were born a bacteria. 3 arms at the very least.
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Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Postinteresting. almost spooky in a way.
It sort of opens up a whole new avenue of thinking
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Originally posted by alreadypacked View PostI think this is possible.
Family I know, father worked in a factory that damaged his hearing. Children born before he worked in factory ok, thoes born after have hearing problems.
It sort of opens up a whole new avenue of thinking
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Originally posted by Troll View PostIn evolutionary terms - only if those muscular racing tadpoles were more energetic little critters than their weedy counterparts -would they be more succesful in a home run.
You are removing that challenge with IVF & assuming that all tadpoles that are fired out of the cannon are created equal
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