Oh dear, you've made some horrible mistakes there.dubbs wrote:
By adaption to the environment, such as tempature, does not have to do anything with the changing of your genes. I have the same genes, and live in America, as someone who was born in Kenya, or China. The have adapted to the difference in the environment where they are, but we have the same genes.Bertster7 wrote:
That's not what evolution is. A lot of people seem to have trouble grasping this, I can't see why.dubbs wrote:
Lets me back Stingray up here. Evolution is a theory that tries to determine where the orgin of life began. Adaption is the theory that says that live changes because of it environment.wiki wrote:
Evolution is the change in the heritable traits of a population over successive generations, as determined by shifts in the allele frequencies of genes.
Also, if you were to reseach evolution in depth, it does try to explain where life on Earth came from.
No, you don't. Everyone has different genes. Unless you have an identical twin or clone in Kenya or China, you are wrong.dubbs wrote:
I have the same genes, and live in America, as someone who was born in Kenya, or China.
I have researched evolution, quite a lot. Adaptation to an environment over a large number of generations is known as natural selection. It is the Darwinian theory of Natural Selection that you are calling adaptation. It has been shown that natural selection occurs on a genetic level, how could it do otherwise the very notion is contradictory to the way in which evolution works.
If you are talking about the theory of adaptation then you really are behind the times. Lamarcks theory has been replaced with Darwins. There are big important differences between the two, the primary one being genetics.
Biological evolution does not try to explain the origins of life on Earth. That steps over the boundary into chemical>biological evolution, which is pure theory at the moment. Experiments like the Miller Urey experiment have shown that various amino acids can be produced in environments similar to that of the young Earth.
Last edited by Bertster7 (2006-11-08 16:21:29)