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Author | Topic: What bothers me about the evolution of Man | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dr Jack Member (Idle past 126 days) Posts: 3514 From: Immigrant in the land of Deutsch Joined:
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Just thousands, to be precise the last two thousand. We know for a cast iron fact that this is false. Human populations show the signs of natural selection for resistance to various diseases.
The population increase that humans went through in the last 2-3 thousand years has few parallels in nature, and there is plenty of evidence showing that selection does not operate in expanding populations, I can dig up refs if you want. But to put it simply, natural selection operates under the premise that some of your progeny will die (and with it presumably your "weak" genes), so in order for natural selection to operate, a certain percentage of the population has to perish. But in today's society this is not happening anymore, or in other words, both the fittest and the weakest are surviving. If both are surviving there is no selection. I would be interested in your refs because the description you have given makes no sense. All selection needs to act is inheritable differences in relative fitness - a gene that produces more living offspring can be selected for in an expanding population as easily as one that produces a drop in living offspring in a reducing population. It would only make no difference if both the fittest and the weakest survive unless they both also go on to have exactly the same number of surviving offspring themselves - at which point they have the same fitness anyway. It's also simply not true that everyone was surviving for last two thousand years, throughout most of that period the majority of people born never lived long enough to have children of their own.
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sfs Member (Idle past 2784 days) Posts: 464 From: Cambridge, MA USA Joined:
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quote:As stated, this is incorrect. Natural selection works just fine in expanding populations, and does not require any deaths at all. Selection requires differential reproduction, not death, and differential reproduction can occur in an expanding population just as well as in any other population. What is true is that fixation of beneficial alleles is less likely in a rapidly expanding population.(*) So if alleles for high intelligence were being selected for in the expanding human population, most new mutations conferring high IQ would not reach 100% in the population -- but the population would still get smarter, on average. (*) Fixation is less likely, but certainly not impossible. Loss of the less fit allele does not require death; it just requires failure to reproduce enough copies to maintain the allele at its existing frequency. In the real world, many humans fail to reproduce at all, and some of them have even been known to die, despite our increase in population size.
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New Cat's Eye Inactive Member |
You guys are confusing things again. I think they're conflating knowledge with intelligence. It takes some intelligence to be able to have all that knowledge, but a huge discrepancy in knowledge does not mean a huge discrepancy in intelligence. I wonder though, how much does increasing your knowledge increase your intelligence... I see there's no one definition of intelligence, and that's the other source of disagreement here: we're talking past each other because we're not talking about the same things.
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Wounded King Member (Idle past 283 days) Posts: 4149 From: Cincinnati, Ohio, USA Joined:
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I think Mr. Jack and sfs have raised the main counter points to your argument that I would have made, principally the fact that there is considerable evidence of selective pressures on human populations shaping their evolution in the last few centuries and that a large expanding population does not prevent evolution according to any current model of population genetics, although it will reduce the likelihood of fixation as sfs suggests.
I'd also like to point out that apart from the theoretical issues the more factual claims you make are also highly dubious. While we may be seeing a reduction in certain selective pressures in the west in 'today's society' these have not been the situation pertaining for the preceding 2000 years, perhaps a case could be made at the outside for a couple of centuries. Further these conditions do not pertain in a very large proportion of the modern world either where survival is still very much a competitive struggle. Certainly the idea the 'the weakest are surviving' seems highly suspicious in evolutionary terms unless you are claiming that there is no longer any child mortality to go along with the equally specious necessary corollary that everyone can now reproduce. Also your argument about Einstein and Hawking seems to be based on a very naive concept of what constitutes fitness. Your own argument in fact seems to directly admit that natural selection is still in operation but that what an evolutionary perspective on natural selection considers the most fit (the less intelligent person who gives rise to many more descendents) does not comport with your own idea of who should be considered fittest (Einstein and Hawking). You seem to be saying in one sentence that there is no selection and then in the very next to be admitting that in fact natural selection is still in operation. To be honest your point is unclear, you seem to be saying that Einstein and Hawking are the result of a relaxation of selection and presumably therefore you consider them less fit and you go on to assure us that there are more fecund/reproductively successful people out there, the very core of the mechanism by which selection operates. So what is it? Do you consider reproductive success a key element of fitness? Do you think there is no differential reproductive success in humans today or that if it exists it is independent of genetics? Perhaps a more cogent example if you were putting forward Einstein and Hawking as less fit would have been to point out that both of them had several children. Of course I'm not sure what your rationale for considering them to be examples of those that selection would naturally weed out before reproduction is. Even in the case of Hawking his motor neurone disease didn't really strike until he was in his 20's, certainly old enough to have reproduced. TTFN, WK
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Portillo Member (Idle past 4412 days) Posts: 258 Joined:
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"And God breathed into his nostrils the breath of life and man became a living soul." Genesis 2:7
And the conspiracy was strong, for the people increased continually - 2 Samuel 15:12
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Percy Member Posts: 22936 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 6.8
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"His mouth became the Brahmin, his arms were made Kings. What were his thighs, they were made into the merchants, and from his feet were the servants born." Verse 12, Purusha Suktam
Should we now discuss which sacred text is correct? Or could you maybe respect the fact that this is a science thread? --Percy
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Tangle Member Posts: 9580 From: UK Joined: Member Rating: 6.6 |
Well it looks like everything we thought we knew was wrong:
In conclusion, it appears that the traditional notion that disproportionately large frontal lobes and frontal cortices are the hallmark of hominid brain evolution is not supported. This paper.......http://www.anthro.ucsd.edu/...ndeferi%20files/NN_Frontal.pdf ..... looked a lot of ape and human brains, compared them and found that there's actually not much difference in size between great ape and human brain frontal cortices Which destroys a lot of previous wisdom and leaves me scratching my head. The idea that humans have disproportionately larger prefrontal lobes (which is where our cognitive functioning occurs) seems to have been founded on a dodgy sample size ie it came from possibly one half-lobe sample. It does go on to speculate about human brain specialisation:
There is already some evidence .........[to] suggest that the internal organization and size of individual cortical areas are specialized among the hominoids. In a previous study, we found that the relative volume of white matter underlying prefrontal association cortices is larger in humans than in great apes ... This is compatible with the idea that neural connectivity has increased in the human brain. More recently we have shown that orangutans have a smaller orbitofrontal sector than other apes or humans ... which suggests that some differences can be found in small subsectors of the frontal lobe at a gross level. Thus, it seems possible, and even likely, that either subsectors of the frontal lobes or individual frontal cortical areas have become specialized during hominoid and hominid evolution. Cognitive specialization in each hominoid species would be related to mosaic evolution and reorganization of specific areas in this and other parts of the brain. We really do know next to nothing about our brains and what we do think we know seems tentative.. Edited by Tangle, : were/whereLife, don't talk to me about life. |
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Portillo Member (Idle past 4412 days) Posts: 258 Joined: |
The problem Percy is that the soul, entity, spirit, will, conscienceness, ego and mind are immaterial and outside of science.
And the conspiracy was strong, for the people increased continually - 2 Samuel 15:12
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Dr Adequate Member Posts: 16113 Joined: |
The problem Percy is that the soul, entity, spirit, will, conscienceness, ego and mind are immaterial and outside of science. Then that would be a particularly good reason not to discuss them in the science forums.
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Portillo Member (Idle past 4412 days) Posts: 258 Joined: |
But thats basically what the question being asked is. Why do humans have the mental faculties we have. Scientifically we can only talk about the mind naturally. No spirit or anything outside of chemistry is allowed.
And the conspiracy was strong, for the people increased continually - 2 Samuel 15:12
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jar Member (Idle past 90 days) Posts: 34140 From: Texas!! Joined: |
Nor is anything outside chemistry and physics needed.
Anyone so limited that they can only spell a word one way is severely handicapped!
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Portillo Member (Idle past 4412 days) Posts: 258 Joined: |
Francis Crick says, "The Astonishing Hypothesis is that "You", your joys and your sorrows, your memories and your ambitions, your sense of personal identity and free will, are in fact no more than the behavior of a vast assembly of nerve cells and their associated molecules... The hypothesis is so alien to the ideas of most people alive today that it can truly be called astonishing."
Other scientists such as Richard Dawkins have said similar things. The question is, do these scientific facts apply to Crick and Dawkins aswell or just the members of the public?And the conspiracy was strong, for the people increased continually - 2 Samuel 15:12
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jar Member (Idle past 90 days) Posts: 34140 From: Texas!! Joined: |
Huh?
Of course scientific facts apply to Crick and Dawkins. Is that somehow relevant to this thread?Anyone so limited that they can only spell a word one way is severely handicapped!
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Portillo Member (Idle past 4412 days) Posts: 258 Joined: |
So if Cricks and Dawkins theories are "nothing more than random behaviour of nerve cells and molecules", why should we listen to them?
Edited by Portillo, : No reason given.And the conspiracy was strong, for the people increased continually - 2 Samuel 15:12
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jar Member (Idle past 90 days) Posts: 34140 From: Texas!! Joined: |
It depends on the content; you test their opinions against reason, logic and reality.
Anyone so limited that they can only spell a word one way is severely handicapped!
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