Cancel 2018.2
Oh, hi
This was a question posed to me the other day.
What do the great people of JPP say?
What do the great people of JPP say?
Anyone besides Sear? I find it difficult to read his posts. I read it twice and it really doesn't make much sense.
Thank you for posting though.
We know, you've said several times already!I don't read sear posts.
"As evolution progressed, those with defective DNA didn't survive or advance very far up the scale.Adversity is the engine of evolution.
see that post? ^
I didn't read it
Amino acids have been found in comets and meteorites.With abiogenesis, we can trace life back to amino acids, which are the smallest building blocks of DNA needed for the process of evolution. Not sure how we got to amino acids, though.
I'm not sure I understand your question. It's very vague. Do you mean "how does DNA replicate it self?"This was a question posed to me the other day.
What do the great people of JPP say?
I think you are forgetting about the role that RNA plays, it is vital to preserve the integrity of the DNA master copy.I'm not sure I understand your question. It's very vague. Do you mean "how does DNA replicate it self?"
Self replication is part of what makes Nucleic acids biologically significant and the laws of genetic inheritance possible.
Or are you asking how does DNA sequencing work or why does DNA know how to sequence base pairings that provide the information for specific protein synthesis? I. E. How does DNA code for proteins?
It's really an odd question to answer scientifically as science doesn't deal with absolute truths but what are facts to the best of our knowledge. The question was like asking "If gravity is true than how can a plane or a bird fly?"
The facts and laws of nature supporting biological evolution are as well known as those of gravity even if we don't know everything about either.
So for the sake of argument can you clarify your question as DNA doesn't "code itself" DNA "copies itself". It codes for proteins. Which are you asking?
I would argue that the person asking the question does not understand either evolution or genetics as DNA does not code itself. It codes for proteins. That makes protein synthesis possible. DNA also self replicates. That makes genetic inheritance of the protein coding function of DNA possible. That link to biological evolution is clear via the biological law of inheritance and the biological law of variation.
Not at all. As I stated above self replication is a big part of what makes "nucleic acids" biologically significant. Not to mention the role they play in protein synthesis. RNA obviously being a nucleic acid. RNA is obviously critical for transferring than transcribing DNA's protein coding in the protein synthesis process.I think you are forgetting about the role that RNA plays, it is vital to preserve the integrity of the DNA master copy.
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To piss off snowflakes, bottom feeders and racists
The ice age is credited for one of the two main periods when human brains became larger/more developed."As evolution progressed, those with defective DNA didn't survive or advance very far up the scale.
But then you have to tie in cataclysmic disasters and those who were so specialized, that they couldn't adapt to significant changes." u9 #4
But DNA faces adversity individual genes can't predict.
The success of competing DNA is strongly influenced by environmental or ambient factors.
As Dr. Carl Sagan observed in his Putlitzer Prize winning book The Dragons of Eden (strongly recommended; an excellent read tailored to the layman)
while the (proto)human population was severely challenged during the most recent ice age,
cranial volume (and thereby brain capacity) skyrocketed.
Anthropologists deduce that the extreme adversity for survival meant only the most resourceful survived.
A previous adversity seems to have killed off the dinosaurs.
Archeological evidence seems to indicate hominids barely survived.
- Chimpanzees and gorillas are stronger.
- Arctic Terns are naturally wider-ranging.
- Birds build better homes (without arms) [when was the most recent time you read of a bird's nest w/ roof collapse?]
- canids and wildcats can chase you down, and eat you up. But cranial volume has given us the rapier, the cage, the gun; and the most ferocious predators on Earth have become the hunted instead of the hunter. Not because humans have sharper teeth. But because we have better aim.
The ice age is credited for one of the two main periods when human brains became larger/more developed.
First, they witnessed carnivores eating meat, and did the same. The protein spike is credited with developing the brain.
When the ice age was upon humans, instead of being nomadic, they were sequestered in pockets. Some say the inbreeding created super intelligent individuals, as well as inferior individual who didn't survive.
Or lived to evolve into Republicans.