New species since humans?
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The population evolves by changing the frequency of those traits.
facts is
if a trait appears in population which is not present in its parents population then that shows ns is wrong as ns is about traits already present i being passed on
definition of NS -from this site
It is the process by which heritable traits that increase an organism’s chances of survival and reproduction are favoured than less beneficial traits. Originally proposed by Charles Darwin, natural selection is the process that results in the evolution of organism
Re:
gamila wrote:The population evolves by changing the frequency of those traits.
facts isif a trait appears in population which is not present in its parents population then that shows ns is wrong as ns is about traits already present i being passed on
definition of NS -from this siteIt is the process by which heritable traits that increase an organism’s chances of survival and reproduction are favoured than less beneficial traits. Originally proposed by Charles Darwin, natural selection is the process that results in the evolution of organism
I really need to take my own advice. We're done here.
I really need to take my own advice. We're done here.
it is logically impossible for natural selection to generate new species ie with new traits never seen before
in your language
if a population has new traits never seen before these traits could not have come from a parent population-as the parent population did not have them- there fore natural selection can not account for their presence as natural selection is all about the passing on of traits [b]already present[b]
It is the process by which heritable traits that increase an organism’s chances of survival and reproduction are favoured than less beneficial traits. Originally proposed by Charles Darwin, natural selection is the process that results in the evolution of organism
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gamila wrote:I really need to take my own advice. We're done here.
it is logically impossible for natural selection to generate new species ie with new traits never seen before
in your language
if a population has new traits never seen before these traits could not have come from a parent population-as the parent population did not have them- there fore natural selection can not account for their presence as natural selection is all about the passing on of traits [b]already present[b]It is the process by which heritable traits that increase an organism’s chances of survival and reproduction are favoured than less beneficial traits. Originally proposed by Charles Darwin, natural selection is the process that results in the evolution of organism
What about genetic mutations? If the mutation is favorable, then it might pass on to next gen.
What about genetic mutations? If the mutation is favorable, then it might pass on to next gen.
the fact that the mutant gene is present in the parent which passes it on to the the next generation
means that the mutant gene in the off spring is not a new gene as it is allready present in the parent
natural selection is all about the passing on of traits already present
if you are implying that the mutant gene leads to a new species off spring
then the parent that passed on the gene would be a new species as it has the gene as well
thus once again
natural selection is all about the passing on of traits already present
it is logically impossible for natural selection to generate new species ie with new traits never seen before if a population has new traits never seen before these traits could not have come from a parent population-as the parent population did not have them- there fore natural selection can not account for their presence as natural selection is all about the passing on of traits [b]already present[b]
as they both have the same gene that makes them a new species
Who ever said the parent had the mutant gene? The offspring could have created the mutant gene which then gets passed on to it's offspring, several generations later the mutation may become dominant, thus altering the phylogeny of the species, but since the species can still mate, they are considered the same species. I am not really sure where your argument is going.
Who ever said the parent had the mutant gene
The offspring could have created the mutant gene which then gets passed on to it's offspring
if the off spring that created the gene- passes it onto its off spring that sure looks like to me as a parent passeing it on to its offspring
natural selection is all about the passing on of traits already present
I am not really sure where your argument is going.
dean is saying
it is logically impossible for natural selection to generate new species ie with new traits never seen before if a population has new traits never seen before these traits could not have come from a parent population-as the parent population did not have them- there fore natural selection can not account for their presence as natural selection is all about the passing on of traits already present
the gene being generated in the off spring as you say and then this off spring passing it onto its offs spring
is just an example of natural selection the last offspring has no new gene never seen before as this gene is present in its parent- the off spring that generated the gene
if you are implying that the mutant gene leads to a new species off spring
then the parent - the off spring that generated the gene- would be a new species -the same as its off spring-as it has the gene as well
in other words if this mutant gene creates a new species then the off spring that generated the gene would be a new species and all it does is then pass it onto its offspring which makes it the same species as its parent
this is just an example of NS
but not an example of NS producing a new species with traits never seen before
as
it is logically impossible for natural selection to generate new species ie with new traits never seen before if a population has new traits never seen before these traits could not have come from a parent population-as the parent population did not have them- there fore natural selection can not account for their presence as natural selection is all about the passing on of traits [b]already present[b]
Again I fail to see your point. An example: Polydactyly or the six finger person, this is an obvious sign of a mutation, yet the mutated indivdual can still inter-breed with its original species.
Mutation does not imply a speciation , only an alteration in the same species. Only after much time and other environmental factors will a new species be possible to emerge.
So what exactly is your argument? Are you saying Darwin is wrong? I only ask because I have not been able grasp the paradigm of your point as it now seems somewhat circular and convoluted.
Mutation does not imply a speciation , only an alteration in the same species. Only after much time and other environmental factors will a new species be possible to emerge.
So what exactly is your argument? Are you saying Darwin is wrong? I only ask because I have not been able grasp the paradigm of your point as it now seems somewhat circular and convoluted.
Are you saying Darwin is wrong?
n dean is correct
Mutation does not imply a speciation , only an alteration in the same species. Only after much time and other environmental factors will a new species be possible to emerge.
the new species - with new traits never seen before-that appears has not been generated by natural selection as natural selection is all about passing on traits already present
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MichaelXY wrote:
So what exactly is your argument? Are you saying Darwin is wrong? I only ask because I have not been able grasp the paradigm of your point as it now seems somewhat circular and convoluted.
Bingo! You now understand gamila (ie Colin Leslie Dean) . He will do nothing but quote himself as an "authority" in the third person over and over while repeating that a new trait cannot be present already since it is a new trait. Ignore him.
Re: New species since humans?
gamila, since I'm not familiar with colin dean, may I ask where you think new species come/came from if not by way of NS? I'm not asking to try and start an argument. Just curious.
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