RE: Human Evolution? (Full Version)

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swan42 -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 4:50:49 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Jhud

quote:

"Critical to the survival of the organism" is not required for selection. Selection only requires the characteristic to be passed on to more offspring. Survival of the organism often desirable to accomplish the task of passing on the characteristic to more offspring and the environment the organism finds itself does not need to be different or change. Though a changing environment is often a pivotal moment that selects against organisms that lack the characteristic of interest.


Funny, you seem to be saying here that in order for a characteristic to be selected, it need not actually be … selected. Ah, the mysteries of the amazingly vague notion of evolution.


No, you simply misunderstand what I say.. Frequently I might add.
You are equating "Critical to the survival of the organism" as the only mechanism for selection.
"Critical to the survival of the organism" is a subset of possible mechanisms for selection.

Suppose a specific mayfly acquires a mutation that doubles the number of viable eggs. The specific mayfly still has an amazingly short lifespan, each of its offspring also survive or die at the same rate as normal mayflies, but because this mutation leads to twice as many offspring, then it is selected for by sheer numerical advantage compared to mayflies without the mutation. Each individual adult mayfly dies just as quickly.




Jhud -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 5:10:55 PM)

quote:

No, you simply misunderstand what I say.. Frequently I might add.
You are equating "Critical to the survival of the organism" as the only mechanism for selection.
"Critical to the survival of the organism" is a subset of possible mechanisms for selection.

Suppose a specific mayfly acquires a mutation that doubles the number of viable eggs. The specific mayfly still has an amazingly short lifespan, each of its offspring also survive or die at the same rate as normal mayflies, but because this mutation leads to twice as many offspring, then it is selected for by sheer numerical advantage compared to mayflies without the mutation. Each individual adult mayfly dies just as quickly.


Well then that ability would quite obviously be critical to the survival of the mutated mayfly, and thus be selected...




swan42 -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 5:26:24 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Jhud

quote:

No, you simply misunderstand what I say.. Frequently I might add.
You are equating "Critical to the survival of the organism" as the only mechanism for selection.
"Critical to the survival of the organism" is a subset of possible mechanisms for selection.

Suppose a specific mayfly acquires a mutation that doubles the number of viable eggs. The specific mayfly still has an amazingly short lifespan, each of its offspring also survive or die at the same rate as normal mayflies, but because this mutation leads to twice as many offspring, then it is selected for by sheer numerical advantage compared to mayflies without the mutation. Each individual adult mayfly dies just as quickly.


Well then that ability would quite obviously be critical to the survival of the mutated mayfly, and thus be selected...

No, the specific mutated mayfly would die on schedule in less than a day just like unmutated mayflies..




gluadys -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 5:42:03 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Jhud

quote:

Right. That is the natural range of neutral variation that exists in any population. But when a variation offers any advantage, however slight, it is selectable. It doesn't have to be something significant or obvious.


Well, of course any genetically expressed characteristic of an organism is 'selectable', I think the larger question, "under what circumstances is a particular genetically expressed characteristic selected and come to typify and organism". I would say generally the answer in this case is, "that characteristic which becomes critical to the survival of the organism in the particular environment it finds itself."

And I would further suggest that those circumstances wherein one particular characteristic is critical are rare indeed.



Swan42 beat me to it. No, for a character trait to become a fixed trait of the species, it is not necessary that it be critical to the survival of the organism. Just a bit better for survival and/or surviving progeny than what it replaced.




Jhud -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 5:44:50 PM)

quote:

No, the specific mutated mayfly would die on schedule in less than a day just like unmutated mayflies..


How does that negate what I just said? Obviously, the increased propogation of 'mutated' mayflies is crtical to their success over the ordinary sort - if it wasn't there wouldn't be a change.




Jhud -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 5:47:37 PM)

quote:

Swan42 beat me to it. No, for a character trait to become a fixed trait of the species, it is not necessary that it be critical to the survival of the organism. Just a bit better for survival and/or surviving progeny than what it replaced.


Actually, I don't think it would then become 'fixed'; it would simply exist as one of a number of possible variations that exist within a population organisms. I mean, sickle cell isn't even a 'fixed' variation, despite the neccesity of it in certain circumstances.




gluadys -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 5:57:26 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Jhud

quote:

Swan42 beat me to it. No, for a character trait to become a fixed trait of the species, it is not necessary that it be critical to the survival of the organism. Just a bit better for survival and/or surviving progeny than what it replaced.


Actually, I don't think it would then become 'fixed'; it would simply exist as one of a number of possible variations that exist within a population organisms.


No, that would mean either that the trait is neutral and not being selected or that the selection factor is changing before the trait is fully fixed.

quote:

I mean, sickle cell isn't even a 'fixed' variation, despite the neccesity of it in certain circumstances.


Special case. Not a good example. Outside of malaria-prone areas, you might note, the lack of sickle cell is fixed.




swan42 -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 5:58:00 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Jhud

quote:

No, the specific mutated mayfly would die on schedule in less than a day just like unmutated mayflies..


How does that negate what I just said? Obviously, the increased propogation of 'mutated' mayflies is crtical to their success over the ordinary sort - if it wasn't there wouldn't be a change.


It wouldn't negate it if we were using the same definition of "organism".

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organism
In biology, an organism is an individual living system (such as animal, plant, fungus or micro-organism).

I'm using the definition above, it now appears to me you are using "organism" as synonymous with "species".
Organism != Species.




Jhud -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 6:02:13 PM)

quote:

No, that would mean either that the trait is neutral and not being selected or that the selection factor is changing before the trait is fully fixed.


Exactly; because it wouldn't be critical to an organisms survival.

quote:

Special case. Not a good example. Outside of malaria-prone areas, you might note, the lack of sickle cell is fixed.


Actually, typical case, and counter to your claims.




Jhud -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 6:13:07 PM)

quote:

It wouldn't negate it if we were using the same definition of "organism".

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organism
In biology, an organism is an individual living system (such as animal, plant, fungus or micro-organism).

I'm using the definition above, it now appears to me you are using "organism" as synonymous with "species".
Organism != Species.


I didn't even use the word organism in the quote you just responded to.




gluadys -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 6:23:31 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Jhud

quote:

No, that would mean either that the trait is neutral and not being selected or that the selection factor is changing before the trait is fully fixed.


Exactly; because it wouldn't be critical to an organisms survival.


Nevertheless, as long as the selection factor is operative, the trend will be toward fixation of the trait whether or not it is critical to the organism's survival.

quote:

Special case. Not a good example. Outside of malaria-prone areas, you might note, the lack of sickle cell is fixed.


Actually, typical case, and counter to your claims.


Not really, since one of the options (lack of sickle cell trait) is fixed in populations not exposed to malaria. You might also note that the presence of sickle-cell trait is not critical to an organism's survival even in malaria prone-areas. The death toll from malaria is higher among those who do not have that trait, but it is far from 100%. Organisms without sickle-cell trait do survive.




swan42 -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/19/2008 6:36:46 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Jhud

quote:

It wouldn't negate it if we were using the same definition of "organism".

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organism
In biology, an organism is an individual living system (such as animal, plant, fungus or micro-organism).

I'm using the definition above, it now appears to me you are using "organism" as synonymous with "species".
Organism != Species.


I didn't even use the word organism in the quote you just responded to.


Two of your posts of yours used "organism". #34 and #23.

I would say generally the answer in this case is, "that characteristic which becomes critical to the survival of the organism in the particular environment it finds itself."

To emphasize the purpose of my posts, I repeated "critical to the survival of the organism" twice myself. #24 and #26. No where to go from here, once we speak the same language, there is nothing to discuss.




Kames -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/25/2008 7:13:54 PM)

i don't want to do a thread about it, sure we could talk more than just the apparent physical but emotioanl and spiritual would still require evolution if you're an evolutionist, so ..
http://www.mefeedia.com/entry/dead-woman-comes-back-to-life/9615542/
http://www.dailymail.com/News/200805200160
synopsis

I guess when they say the Lord works in mysterious ways, they really mean it!
Imagine having a love one who is dead for 17 1/2 hours, then you get a call saying they're still alive.
Authorities even say that rigor mortis had set in on Thomas' body, but that didn't stop Val from bouncing back from the dead.

That's what happened to Val Thomas. Evidnetly her family made the decision to take her off life support after Thomas suffered three heart attacks. Little did they know that Val would come back to life despite that fact that she had no brainwaves for nearly 18 hours.




Kames -> RE: Human Evolution? (5/25/2008 9:03:49 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: swan42

Just 3 people in the world have this ability.

http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/conditions/05/07/miraculous.memory/index.html

i've read about this before
nothing really stood out for me
sure, it's nice but the science isn't there yet
http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/02/22/memory.man.ap/index.html
cnn has been pushing this Brad Williams article quite a bit in the last 9 months or so [&:][8|]
i'll quote my criticism from the the article itself

Because a person's interest in the information is a key factor in recall ability, some researchers doubt that Williams and A.J. are unique.

"If it's a truly amazing memory that just sucks things up, it shouldn't be based on how interesting something was to you," said Stephen Christman, a neuropsychologist at the University of Toledo in Ohio.

Christman, who wasn't involved in the research, pointed to baseball fanatics who remember obscure statistics because of their passion for the game. Perhaps, he speculated, A.J. obsesses so much over past events and relives them so frequently in her mind that it's now effortless for her to recall countless dates and events.


these are also related curiosities
http://news.aol.com/story/ar/_a/her-unmatched-memory-a-blessing-curse/20080508093709990001
http://www.cnn.com/2008/HEALTH/conditions/05/02/deep.brain.stim/index.html?iref=newssearch
http://www.livescience.com/memory/




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