Maybe you're just misinterpreting my 7/10 analogy on natural selection?
1/5/2010 4:13:27 PM
are you really this stupid?
1/5/2010 5:44:22 PM
I actually am over here thinking I'm the only one in this thread with
1/5/2010 6:44:37 PM
Intelligence Gene, Bitches:
1/5/2010 7:17:09 PM
according to that, the other 97% is NOT genetic
1/5/2010 7:22:24 PM
^^Everybody has thunk it except mambagrl.Congrats!
1/5/2010 9:35:48 PM
97 vs 3% is hardly "BOTH"
1/5/2010 9:37:28 PM
How is it not both?
1/5/2010 9:44:18 PM
how is "hardly" "not" ?
1/5/2010 9:53:19 PM
1/6/2010 2:42:55 AM
regardless of it being only one gene or not, there are still two components which undeniably constitutes both.also, i've been biting my tongue because i normally don't feed trolls, but i just can't contain myself any more. IF YOU WORK OUT REALLY HARD AND BUILD MUSCLE THAT IN NO WAY AFFECTS YOUR CHILDREN AND THEIR MUSCULAR CAPABILITIES.
1/6/2010 9:15:08 AM
I'm seriously amazed by this thread.
1/6/2010 9:30:38 AM
its called natural selection. if your environment begins to require lots of muscle work, offspring will inherit muscular traits. Why do you think the south is SO athletic?in a year there are both days where raleigh is covered in snow and days where raleigh is not blanketed in snow. [Edited on January 6, 2010 at 11:09 AM. Reason : hardly both]
1/6/2010 11:08:15 AM
Thanks for playing.Natural Selection = people adapted to environment are more likely to breed better. More of these people are around the next generation. Still more likely to breed better. Eventually these people make up the entire population. The environment has absolutely nothing to do with what traits an individual will pass to an offspring. If you stayed in a cave for the rest of your life and had big eyes like golem, guess what? Your kids would be born with normal sized eyes.Now if large eyed individuals are more likely to survive and more likely to breed, then in a population they will be having a greater number of big-eyed children who will then have even a greater number of big-eyed children and so forth until you have a population that has the most optimal eye-size for the environment.Now, one thing to note, if your environment contains mutagens, then it is possible your environment would have an impact on what traits you pass to your children. Or if you were hit by an atomic bomb recently.[Edited on January 6, 2010 at 4:40 PM. Reason : *mutations]
1/6/2010 4:38:15 PM
1/6/2010 9:08:02 PM
1/6/2010 9:19:33 PM
first of all natural selection is not the same thing as evolution. Secondly that post is partially correct with a few incorrect statements but the poster seems to have a very elementary (southern approved high school textbookesque) understanding of natural selection.
1/6/2010 9:39:55 PM
we'll work with your example in order to place out the err in your perception. With these turtles those with longer necks were more likely to survive and get food. This quality was an attractive quality. Thus turtles with a gene for longer necks would breed more often both because:1. they were likely to survive to breed in the first place AND2. because the longer neck has become a more desirable trait and as such turtles with this particular distinction would be chosen more frequently as mates.Where your comprehension of the matters fails is that you believe the use of this gene promoted a stronger expression of this gene in the offspring. This is incorrect. Those turtles who used their necks did not produce offspring with longer necks based on the use of their necks alone.If I am naturally predisposed to being muscular and that is seen as an attractive trait then my likelihood in being perceived as an ideal mate rises. I then pass my genes along to my children who will carry this trait and possible breed with another offspring of someone who was naturally muscular. Now we have a grandchild of potential muscular variety and the trend continues. A very good recent example of natural selection, since most have been removed, is height. If I stretch myself out all day to get taller that won't affect my offspring; however, taller people are more likely to breed due to the desirability of the trait and this will in turn favor the production of tall children.do you understand it yet?
1/7/2010 9:35:42 AM
I understand completely what you are saying but you have one component of this down but that seems to be all you know about the topic. Thats why I said elementary understanding.Beneficial traits aren't always visible so often times organisms with the trait are just as sexually desireable as ones without it. Does this means natural selection doesn't take place with these traits? No. Physical adjustments to your environment often alter your dna which is passed on. Of course some of this happens with the brain but the human brain is so powerful and so unused that the 3% is highly negligible. Now, if humans used 100% of their brains then that would be something closer to a +-3% difference in human cognitive ability based on genetics.
1/7/2010 9:46:08 AM
1/7/2010 10:23:09 AM
it just keeps getting better[Edited on January 7, 2010 at 11:17 AM. Reason : is there such thing as a /facepalm gene?]
1/7/2010 11:16:37 AM
1/7/2010 11:32:40 AM
1/7/2010 11:43:08 AM
holy crap you guys need to take a step back to op's map/article. Do you really think there were black people in europe but they died off because they couldn't mate? And none of the white people in africa could mate so they died off?Or did the change in the environment (less radiation exposure as they migrated from equator) cause their skin to not produce as much melanin? Well were all of their kids in europe born black again? no these alterations due to a different environment were passed on.[Edited on January 7, 2010 at 7:40 PM. Reason : V?]
1/7/2010 7:22:09 PM
cause they are better, duhbtw, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/10%25_of_brain_myth[Edited on January 7, 2010 at 7:43 PM. Reason : ]
1/7/2010 7:38:16 PM
WTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
1/8/2010 9:40:06 AM
1/8/2010 11:39:11 AM
mambagrl confusing "breeding" with "mating" ITT.Individuals with horribly shitty traits to the environment can fuck as well as other individuals. See the above post for clarification.
1/8/2010 1:29:14 PM
^actually see my post again saying "do you really think...[confusion]"
1/10/2010 10:52:42 PM
stop seriously
1/11/2010 1:57:33 AM
hopefully she will learn, so her offspring can inherit the "know when to stop" gene.[Edited on January 11, 2010 at 12:58 PM. Reason : d]
1/11/2010 12:55:08 PM
i hope what she says is true.i'd love for my kid to be a transformer since I spend so much of my time in automobiles.
1/11/2010 1:42:41 PM
I hope my kid inherits my post history on tww.
1/11/2010 1:44:06 PM
Mambagrl seems like she would fit in nicely with the geniuses in the show Jersey Shore.[Edited on January 11, 2010 at 10:33 PM. Reason : in]
1/11/2010 10:30:20 PM
1/12/2010 11:18:53 AM
1/13/2010 7:22:25 PM
[Edited on January 13, 2010 at 8:04 PM. Reason : thats rude]
1/13/2010 7:59:25 PM
1/13/2010 8:11:02 PM
I didn't ask you to explain anything. I said ask yourselves those questions.
1/13/2010 9:04:13 PM
lol y'all niggas is getting trolled HARD ITT
1/13/2010 10:01:39 PM
At some point in history, a genetic trait was created to increase the paleness of skin by combining the two genotypes or a genetic mutation....Until the event (vitamin d deficiency) caused this trait to increase survivability its presence in population was simply a matter of chance and what other genes it interacted with during breeding.However, when the event occurred, this trait became more prevalent as more people with the trait survived to make more children. NOT ALL OF THEIR CHILDREN HAD THIS TRAIT, however, as it like many other genetic traits aren't guaranteed to manifest in children depending on the genetic makeup of the child's other parent. Therefore those children were more likely to die and less likely to get the opportunity to pass the trait to their children. Get it yet?The event (sudden vitamin d shortage) did not cause the mutation. It existed in the population before this point. Everyone didn't suddenly become paler. Life is not X-men.[Edited on January 13, 2010 at 11:19 PM. Reason : .]
1/13/2010 11:13:54 PM
mambagrl is doing that trick of hers where she says something absolutely goddamn retarded and gets called out on it.Then she pulls the "I was trying to get you to think about blah blah blah" shit.
1/14/2010 12:40:49 AM
wtf happened to this thread
1/14/2010 12:43:20 AM
Much truth in that but you speak as if there are only two races. Or maybe you're just trying to oversimplify it. There is a smooth transition from black to white with all the races in between. That is evidence that transitions took place over several generations. We also see clearly the effect of "tanning"^^
1/14/2010 8:56:33 AM
He isn't speaking as if there are only two races. His situation is independent of race. In this scenario there could have been 1 race at the time, 2 races at the time, or 500 at the time. Race is nothing more than a collection of traits that is the result of genetic drift. Lets say the pale mutation happened in Africa, which is likely since so much of our time was spent there, and people migrated out. Those who crossed the through india and towards asia would not be so adverse affected by the lack of sun and some brown people would have maintained adequate vitamin d to keep alive and pass along their genes. conversely less would have survived in europe and those who continued to survive would be more pale. Skin color isn't just black, white, red, or yellow. there is variation in all 'races' and ethnic subgroups.
1/14/2010 9:32:43 AM
The idea that black people couldn't survive in China, the sahara region and even the mediterranean is a reach. Even then. Not enough would've died create the uniform distribution of native complextion.
1/14/2010 9:42:38 AM
Do an experiment. Eat carrots until you turn orange. Have your mate eat carrots until he turns orange. Fuck and have a child. Will it be orange?
1/14/2010 9:49:05 AM
No because your body isn't producing the karotin and even if it was this is a gradual process that takes several generations.
1/14/2010 10:05:26 AM
Lamarck is proud of this thread.
1/14/2010 10:10:23 AM
It was not a random mutation that gave some giraffes longer necks.
1/14/2010 11:04:42 AM