Altfish
Veteran Member
More research into the Peppered Moth's evolution...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36424768
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36424768
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rapid evolutionary change
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-36424768
And we are taught evolutionary change takes thousands of years.
Erm, no. Evolution takes as long as it takes for allele frequencies within any living populations to change. If you're talking about large changes in slowly-reproducing species, that can take a longer time, of course. But small amounts of change within organisms with much higher rates of reproduction take significantly shorter time. Either way, all changes big and small are a result of evolution. What you're saying is akin to "I heard someone used a plane to travel only a couple of miles - and we are taught that planes travel thousands of miles!".rapid evolutionary change
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-36424768
And we are taught evolutionary change takes thousands of years.
It does depending on what sort of transition you refer to. There is a difference between a moth's wings changing color, and birds descending from dinosaurs, for example.
Erm, no. Evolution takes as long as it takes for allele frequencies within any living populations to change. If you're talking about large changes in slowly-reproducing species, that can take a longer time, of course. But small amounts of change within organisms with much higher rates of reproduction take significantly shorter time. Either way, all changes big and small are a result of evolution. What you're saying is akin to "I heard someone used a plane to travel only a couple of miles - and we are taught that planes travel thousands of miles!".
Did you understand anything that I wrote?Like the lab experiments with the fruit fly perhaps????
I get that. Thanks.
( Who the hell is erm??????????????)
Really? I'd never have guessed that.
(Dry humorous comment by me.)
Your comment lead me to believe that you didn't fully understand the whole deal, so I was just trying to get you caught up.
More research into the Peppered Moth's evolution...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36424768[/QUOTE
When I think of evolution, I think of a new species, a change to the degree that something is no longer what it was.
I see adaptation as a variance within a species but not to the degree in which it becomes a new species.
Obviously we have variations when comparing races within our own species but we're still all human.
If the argument is that adaptation is the small steps of evolution, does that mean certain human races are further ahead or behind in the evolutionary process?
If so does that legitimize eugenics?
Does that legitimize racism?
Then the question becomes where you draw the barrier between species. As it is defined scientifically, we have already observed populations of organisms separating two distinct species. Ultimately, both adaptation and speciation are caused by the same process. What you're saying is akin to "I define the force that forms large bodies in space to be drawn to each other as 'gravity', but the force that pulls a pencil towards the earth is simply 'falling'". In either case, adaptation or speciation, the process is the same, just as it is the same force acting on the planets and the pencil.When I think of evolution, I think of a new species, a change to the degree that something is no longer what it was.
I see adaptation as a variance within a species but not to the degree in which it becomes a new species.
No, because there is no such thing as "further ahead" in the evolutionary process. Evolution isn't a process with a specific end goal, and it is not some form a ladder in which some organisms can be "more" or "less evolved" than others.Obviously we have variations when comparing races within our own species but we're still all human.
If the argument is that adaptation is the small steps of evolution, does that mean certain human races are further ahead or behind in the evolutionary process?
No. Why would it?If so does that legitimize eugenics?
No.Does that legitimize racism?
Then the question becomes where you draw the barrier between species. As it is defined scientifically, we have already observed populations of organisms separating two distinct species. Ultimately, both adaptation and speciation are caused by the same process. What you're saying is akin to "I define the force that forms large bodies in space to be drawn to each other as 'gravity', but the force that pulls a pencil towards the earth is simply 'falling'". In either case, adaptation or speciation, the process is the same, just as it is the same force acting on the planets and the pencil.
No, because there is no such thing as "further ahead" in the evolutionary process. Evolution isn't a process with a specific end goal, and it is not some form a ladder in which some organisms can be "more" or "less evolved" than others.
No. Why would it?
No.
No, IF's right. Evolution's any heritable change in the genome. If enough small changes accumulate we call it a new species.1. No...adapting doesn't change a species to another species. Its just a slight change within a species. The article is using adaptation and evolution interchangeably which is wrong. Evolution is from one species to another.
Huh?As for gravity, the pencil is searching for a like condition. Being generative, in a mass like state it falls to the earth. As the pencil decays into a gaseous form it rises to space to again find a like condition.
Walter Russell corrected Newtons observation of the apple. You can read about it in his book "The Secret of Light"
I don't get your point. Who says humans have stopped evolving?2. Are you saying theres nothing left for humanity to evolve too?? Can you prove it??
Your starting to sound more like a preacher than a science based atheist...
If you don't believe the adaptation of pigmentation in humans is a sign of further evolution than you just soloed this article for me. Tks
I've already explained this. You're quite simply wrong. What you are talking about is the difference between adaptation and speciation, not adaptation and evolution. Evolution is the mechanism of change. It is the process by which organisms adapt AND speciate. Whether the change is small or large, the process is the same - evolution. In the exact same way that we have one word to describe the force that draws celestial bodies together and causes a pencil to fall to the ground - gravity.1. No...adapting doesn't change a species to another species. Its just a slight change within a species. The article is using adaptation and evolution interchangeably which is wrong. Evolution is from one species to another.
That has absolutely nothing to do with what I wrote. Do you understand what I meant?As for gravity, the pencil is searching for a like condition. Being generative, in a mass like state it falls to the earth. As the pencil decays into a gaseous form it rises to space to again find a like condition.
Walter Russell corrected Newtons observation of the apple. You can read about it in his book "The Secret of Light"
No. I didn't even remotely say that.2. Are you saying theres nothing left for humanity to evolve too??
Only because you're apparently imagining things that I've written rather than actually reading/understanding what I have ACTUALLY written. What I explained is that there is no such thing as "more" or "less" evolved, and no means to use evolution as a rational justification for eugenics or racism.Your starting to sound more like a preacher than a science based atheist...
I never said humans aren't continuing to evolve. Please don't put words in my mouth.If you don't believe the adaptation of pigmentation in humans is a sign of further evolution than you just soloed this article for me. Tks
What does that have to do with legitimizing eugenics?3. Good answer and it shouldn't but lets not forget that it was scientist who ran the eugenics programs and that was the purpose for the question.
No, IF's right. Evolution's any heritable change in the genome. If enough small changes accumulate we call it a new species.
And did you miss the mention of observed speciation?
Question: How would these "slight changes" know when to stop, so their accumulation won't go too fare and produce a new species?
Huh?
I don't get your point. Who says humans have stopped evolving?
It does, and even a lot longer, how long did it take for the moth to even appear as a moth.rapid evolutionary change
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-36424768
And we are taught evolutionary change takes thousands of years.
I've already explained this. You're quite simply wrong. What you are talking about is the difference between adaptation and speciation, not adaptation and evolution. Evolution is the mechanism of change. It is the process by which organisms adapt AND speciate. Whether the change is small or large, the process is the same - evolution. In the exact same way that we have one word to describe the force that draws celestial bodies together and causes a pencil to fall to the ground - gravity.
That has absolutely nothing to do with what I wrote. Do you understand what I meant?
No. I didn't even remotely say that.
Only because you're apparently imagining things that I've written rather than actually reading/understanding what I have ACTUALLY written. What I explained is that there is no such thing as "more" or "less" evolved, and no means to use evolution as a rational justification for eugenics or racism.
I never said humans aren't continuing to evolve. Please don't put words in my mouth.
What does that have to do with legitimizing eugenics?
What is this wall, this limit on gene expression? How does it work? How does DNA know when to stop changing so as to avoid becoming a new species?Science may be trying to spin adaptation as evolution to make up for its inability to prove species to species evolution but its not the same.
You can force change within a species through experiments but theres always a wall you will hit which is the limit in which the genes can be expressed. Thats the "limited" expression of adaptation.
What?! That's absurd. It implies no such thing. You really have no grasp of even the basics of biology, do you?Stating that a long line of small adaptations will at some point culminate in that species being identified as a new species "natural selection" also implies an improvement over previous species.
Walk outside and place on X on the ground representing a species current condition.
Now walk 100ft and place an O on the ground representing new species per natural selection.
So if I start at X and start walking "minor adaptive changes" your telling me i'm not progressing because I haven't reached O yet? Or that my buddy who is still standing at X is as evolved as I am because I haven't reached O yet even though he hasn't even started the necessary adsptive journey yet? And that there is no advantage to all my adaptations until I reach O?
That makes no sense at all. Science clearly doesn't have this theory worked out yet based on your promotion of it.
Which post?If you need further explanation on the pencil, read the book I named in the post.