Why did we ever have a tail bone then? Because we used to have tails. Its a vestigial at this point, but once was not. By that logic we would still have tails for mobility.ash-brewster said:It doesn't work like that, our genome is not going to suddenly change and remove a finger unless there is a advantage to losing it which there is not. We still have a tail bone and we don't need that and haven't done since we began to walk on two legs and not live in trees.intheweeds said:I think that is precisely why they are saying that. It's useless, so eventually it will disappear. It a useless relic that will eventually drop off since there is no reason to have it.ash-brewster said:I doubt we would lose our pinkys since there is no evolutionary reason to do away with it, a few people might mutate and not have one and possibly have already but its not a benefit to the species so unlikely to happenintheweeds said:You think that's fast? Look at dogs. They evolve over a few generations.ash-brewster said:Oh I know that, as a species humanity has evolved massively faster than other species where changes take millions of years.Gluzzbung said:The point I'm trying to make is that we're expecting humans to evolve over a period of ten thousand years, being generous, but that is a tiny number in comparison to how many years it's take us to get to here and still pathetic when looking at a species that has evolved fast, like certain types of fish, their name escapes me right now.ash-brewster said:We didn't evolve from neanderthals, they were a completely different species that died out though certain characteristics of the neanderthals did outlive the species due to in breeding with homo sapiens (us)Gluzzbung said:I hate it when scientists and others alike say thing like "humans can't evolve." They don't look at the bigger picture, humans have evolved from neanderthals (is that how you spell it?) over millions of years and the CAN evolve, just not while natural selection has gone out the window with handicapped people and those with less desirable natural traits can roam around breeding. Personally I'd like the old meat and two veg to be refined a bit more, it always looks a bit of an after thought.
OT: I can't remember where i heard this, but it has been said to me that science has a theory that we will eventually lose our pinky fingers. Sorry to all musicians.
I think you're misunderstanding a little something about genetics. A dominant trait is not something that's simply more prevalent. It's a trait that is expressed if you have it. Period, end statement. A given gene isn't dominant because it's common, it's common because it's dominant.Raioken18 said:Brown eyes being the dominant gene doesn't mean that it is more likely for the next generation of a blue-brown pairing to have the outcome of being brown, it just means that at the moment more people have brown eyes. If blue eyes continued to be prioritised sexually over thousands of years it may become the dominate gene itself.
Please enlighten us oh great master of scientific law. prove Macroevolution to be law instead of the theory that it currently is. Also explain how it was Mutation when in fact most mutations result in the death of the creature instead of it becoming a new species or better. Take the four winged fruit fly. its extra 2 wings are useless and cripple it. We have never once found an anatomical mutation that benefits any species in any way. Also almost every "missing link" that has been found has generally come up as a severe case of rickets disorder.Artic Xiongmao said:Jak23 said:None, because macroevolution is false.You guys are kidding... right?Randomosity said:We can always continue with Micro-evolution but as for Macro-evolution (such as us coming from apes) that is scientifically impossible, Macro-Evolution is pure sci-fi seeing as both the Law of Biogenesis and the second law of thermodynamics both go against Macro-evolution. Though Micro-evolution is a very well proven thing and is constantly happening.
Wow. Education is really fucked up wherever you people are from. Statistically you lot are bound to be either from an islamic state or from the USA. Eitherway... holy fuck. Can't you just read the Wikipedia page to know why you are so utterly wrong and there is nothing but a "time-scale" difference between micro-evolution and macro-evolution?
Just... wow. I don't know where to begin. If someone wants to get a stab at it, okay. Or just recommend this people to read a fucking book.
I guess by "studies" you mean "a lot of weird people making up equally weird theories with no basis"... Nothing will happen 2012. Besides, we evolve right now. We ALWAYS evolve. It is a gradual process that continues as long as a species exists.DJ_DEnM said:Wait till 2012.
The studies say the world will change, not that it will end :/. For all we know we could evolve.
They're less likely to procreate. Natural selection FTW.wooty said:Humans have.....evolved? Not from what I've just seen in the crowd lurking outside of McDonalds.
well humans need to be stronger more intelligent and have a resistance to several natural diseases eg diabetesDominic Burchnall said:This is just a thought which came to me the other day. I was looking out the window of the bus and realised how far humanity has come since the early days. Scientific and technological advancements have compensated for nearly all our shortcomings. Cars, heavy machinery, computers, medical achievements, have allowed us to become lords of the planet.
Then a thought struck me; have we taken ourselves outside of evolution? Wild animals have predation, harsh weather conditions, foraging or hunting for food, sickness, and a myriad other worries, but for humans, dangerous animals can be repelled or destroyed, houses (and in extreme cases, bunkers) protect us from the weather, or food is easier to access than ever, and we have a greater understanding of diseases and inherent frailties and how to compensate for them than ever before. So I wonder, do humans have ANY remaining evolutionary pressures, in the First World climate at least, and if so what traits would they select for?
This was pretty much what I was going to say. Of course, I was also thinking that we might grow a sixth or seventh finger... somehow.Slayer_2 said:Well, we'll eventually lose most body hair, our toes will recede further, we'll lose toe/finger nails. At least I think so, considering they all serve little point in our day-to-day lives. Our fingers will likely get stronger and longer, too.