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Originally posted by Sight2reality
I think you misunderstand the fundamental basis of evolution theory completely.
Originally posted by Sight2realityIt in no way is "racist". I have no idea where you came up with that.
Originally posted by Lillo
this gene decide about the pigmentation of the skin. The humans who presented this defect produced more vitamin D in the region of the world where there is less light
but.... some says that, base on the evolutionism, only the population who presented this defect, could survive in region where there less sun. And so, this is why there were no black people, anymore in region like europe, ural, ... What? This is to say that only a few of the travelers survived far from Africa??? Or that the women didn't make baby with the men who where not "affected"?
In my opinion, it is more probable that the human gene "adapt" to the local condition... through unveiled "decisional" behavior or system. What do you think about it?
Originally posted by mattison0922
As the other poster mentioned, evolutionary theory doesn't speak to absolutes, only to probabilities. A certain mutation may increase the probability that an organism will survive long enough to reproduce under a particular set of selective conditions. There are in fact very few absolutes in Biology.
....
I think what you are saying is that is the genes somehow respond to environmental influence and adapt (mutate) as a function of particular selective conditions.
Originally posted by mattison0922This isn't generally how Darwinian Theory is thought to operate, it's generally thought to operate via selective pressure on random variations that result from processes such as genetic recombination, and random mutation....
BTW, I think what you are referring to with respect to the Mayans is Niacin deficiency. There's lots of niacin present in corn, but is not bio-available unless you prepare the corn via cooking in 'lime water.' I am not sure exactly how you were trying to correlate this with the other stuff, but I am actually intrigued by such things myself. How did they know how to do that? It's sort of interesting, but nothing I've ever really studied in depth.
Originally posted by Lillo
About mutation, I remember that there are some species (some kind of lezard. Anyone knows the name?) living in the dark cavern completely deprived of eyes. These animals when taken to the light, develop the organ after a few generations. Well, this is not a proof of an "intelligent" behavior of our DNA since the coding must be already present, and so only activated. But it shows some kind of "reaction"...
My university was about bio-technology, and now I working in computer science... so it's hard for me not to make a comparison:
in a few year of existence, the "programming languages" moved from the 1st to 4th generation(I won't describe it here, it's off topic), and some research about IA, that imitate the life style(neural network), are able to reprogram themself to obtain better result. And this only after a few year of research...
The life on earth got billions of year to reach the same (or better) level...
Yes, it must Niacin deficiency, I couldn't remember the name.
What I mean with this is that our ancestors shows the ability to found unexpected solution to adapt to the local ressources. And so, I don't see any reason why any population wouldn't evolve in any part of the world...
Originally posted by mattison0922
If you could perhaps find out where you heard that or otherwise, I'd appreciate it
About mutation, I remember that there are some species (some kind of lezard. Anyone knows the name?) living in the dark cavern completely deprived of eyes.
Despite being blind, the cavefish still retains its original circuit of eye-building genes.
Originally posted by Nygdan
From the article it looks like they are talking about the cave type being able to mate with the non-cave 'ancestral' type and produce viable offspring.
Despite being blind, the cavefish still retains its original circuit of eye-building genes.
Fascinating.
Special Emphasis by mattison0922
The most startling thing he has found is that cavefish grow eyes for quite a long time. Just as in surface fish, the brains of cave fish embryos bulge out to the sides, stretching into stalks that end in cups. A simple retina and lens begin to form, and growing nerves begin to link the retina to the visual centers of the fish brain....
if they transplanted just the lens of a surface fish into the eye of a cave fish, the cave fish grew a completely normal eye. What's more, the transplant triggered new nerve fibers to project from the retina to the brain, and the part of the cave fish's brain that handles vision even grew.
Fascinating
Originally posted by mattison0922
Specifically the idea that genomes receive information from the environment and respond.