Quote from: Tubby on February 14, 2011, 01:20:47 AMBut galaxies don't have the ability to ask questions about why they exist. Human beings do, and human beings typically rationalise such things as having some sort of 'purpose' or 'meaning'. I know that's not science, but it's how most human beings generally do things.Has anyone considered the possibility that plants communicate with each other on a level we do not understand. Maybe they talk to each other about their "Purpose of Life"
But galaxies don't have the ability to ask questions about why they exist. Human beings do, and human beings typically rationalise such things as having some sort of 'purpose' or 'meaning'. I know that's not science, but it's how most human beings generally do things.
I looked outside and observed nature today... it was so breathtaking and majestic as a whimsical breeze wafted against me. Us retards can just never hope to understand this extraordinary masterpiece we call nature. If you wanna know what i'm talking about smoke some peyote. Just not too much or you will be visited by mesquilito; just enough to observe nature to the point you cannot understand it, so in turn you truly understand it
Has anyone considered the possibility that plants communicate with each other on a level we do not understand. Maybe they talk to each other about their "Purpose of Life"
The point is, we're not passing on a bunch of customized genetic information to our children in the general case. We're passing on a subset of the same identical genes carried by the rest of the population.So unless an individual is the carrier of some new advantageous mutation (rare!), his genes are already widespread throughout the population. If that individual doesn't breed, his genes haven't been lost anyway.
Not wanting to mess up the discussion which I'm finding a bit interesting. I don't know about plants but having been a beekeeper for over 50 years I have to say I'm totally amazed at those little buggers communication (and a lot of other) skills (as well as a lot of other insects )
I always considered a child exactly just that: "A bunch of customised genetic information"; which is why no two children anywhere in the world (apart from identical twins) look the same.
I always considered a child exactly just that: "A bunch of customised genetic information"; which is why no two children anywhere in the world (apart from identical twins) look the same.Sure, a child's genetic inheretance is composed only of those genes already available in the gene pool (apart from spontaneous mutations as you say), but those genes can be rearranged in a virtually infinite number of ways.
Yes, the child's genes are "subsets" of those already available in the gene pool, but you seem to be looking at those "subsets" as pieces of a jigsaw puzzle which can only be put together in one specific way - which is clearly incorrect, otherwise we would all look the same!
Aren't those subsets more like grains of sand on a beach which, once disturbed by the tide, are never likely to form the same pattern again?
Quote from: haunted on February 14, 2011, 06:11:52 PMI looked outside and observed nature today... it was so breathtaking and majestic as a whimsical breeze wafted against me. Us retards can just never hope to understand this extraordinary masterpiece we call nature. If you wanna know what i'm talking about smoke some peyote. Just not too much or you will be visited by mesquilito; just enough to observe nature to the point you cannot understand it, so in turn you truly understand itHaunted, I think you're right (to some extent). Most drugs tend to repress / supress our higher thought processes and revert us to a more 'primitive' state in which we are probably more in tune with nature as it really is - not as we attept to rationalise it. Not that I've ever experienced this...
We'd need to be careful with what we mean by, "genes can be rearranged in a virtually infinite number of ways". The information in the genes themselves is not being rearranged--meaning again that (barring mutation) any genes the child passes to its own offspring, will be the same unmodified genes it inherited from one of its parents.It's really a crucial point that the genes are being passed on unmodified, because it's a key reason evolution by natural selection operates over such long time scales; and conversely a key reason why evolution by natural selection is mostly oblivious to the reproduction of individual organisms.
almost kinda funny how anyone even replies in this thread considering Tubby is obviously just here to troll and disagree on anything anyone says because he knows all, and writes a novel in reply to any disagreement or such. Should just lock this topic and be done with it already.
Quote from: |iR|RICK on February 15, 2011, 11:14:18 AMalmost kinda funny how anyone even replies in this thread considering Tubby is obviously just here to troll and disagree on anything anyone says because he knows all, and writes a novel in reply to any disagreement or such. Should just lock this topic and be done with it already.That's right, Rick. Let's just sweep it all under the carpet, because thousands of people all around the world aren't really oppressing, rejecting, and killing each other because of their own personal (usually religious) beliefs. Yes, let's just be done with this topic and lock it already.That will surely solve the problem.
<Over-exaggeration>You spending your whole life on a forum trolling </Over-exaggeration>isn't going to solve anything either. Keep bitch/whining/crying/trolling/whatever you wanna do, you aren't going to change shit. But keep going, this thread has given me a couple of grins.