- 13 Apr 2013 06:54
#14213418
We wouldn't want our race to be disadvantaged, would we?
There had been very specialized human races. One case in point is the Neanderthal. How could the Neanderthal, both stronger and having a larger brain size, become extinct on his home turf in conditions he had been specialized in? They advance all sorts of puny theories (mostly involving lack of intelligence, tools on which they have no evidence whatsoever) but somehow they're missing the most obvious point; namely that gene flow from Sapiens to Neanderthal, which is known to have happened the other way round, could have anatomically and mentally weakened the Neanderthal. Nobody even considers this. That is why the "experts" are the least persons I trust. They are the most accustomed to thinking "inside the box". It is no coincidence that contemporary biological theories mirror the political reality of globalization in the same way that the biological theories of the 19th centuries mirrored the political reality of imperialism. The empirical sciences are taught centrally (because they are not things which can be arrived at by the mind alone) and are therefore very prone to political paradigmization.
Well, I think you started the confusion. It is that genetic drift that actually predominates in bottlenecking events, not gene flow, as you had written in your original post.
I fail to see your point. No human race is specialized beyond a handful adaptations in regards to climate. I also do not see why we would wan't disadvantaged specialization when specialization implies evolutionary advantage. Also since stochastic event refers to a non-deterministic event I fail to see the point in saying something isn't necessarily disadvantaged by it since its randomly determined.
We wouldn't want our race to be disadvantaged, would we?
There had been very specialized human races. One case in point is the Neanderthal. How could the Neanderthal, both stronger and having a larger brain size, become extinct on his home turf in conditions he had been specialized in? They advance all sorts of puny theories (mostly involving lack of intelligence, tools on which they have no evidence whatsoever) but somehow they're missing the most obvious point; namely that gene flow from Sapiens to Neanderthal, which is known to have happened the other way round, could have anatomically and mentally weakened the Neanderthal. Nobody even considers this. That is why the "experts" are the least persons I trust. They are the most accustomed to thinking "inside the box". It is no coincidence that contemporary biological theories mirror the political reality of globalization in the same way that the biological theories of the 19th centuries mirrored the political reality of imperialism. The empirical sciences are taught centrally (because they are not things which can be arrived at by the mind alone) and are therefore very prone to political paradigmization.
Also you seem to have confused gene flow (allele migration between two populations) and genetic drift (random changes in the gene pool of a population due to bottlenecks, founder effect, and chance). They are two different evolutionary effects of five.
Well, I think you started the confusion. It is that genetic drift that actually predominates in bottlenecking events, not gene flow, as you had written in your original post.