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8 votes
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Sharing without clicking on news in social media
17 votes -
Parachute use to prevent death and major trauma when jumping from aircraft: randomized controlled trial
26 votes -
The Business-School research scandal that just keeps getting bigger
11 votes -
Book review: Eric Turkheimer's "Understanding the Nature-Nurture Debate"
10 votes -
Giant impact had silver lining for life, according to new study
5 votes -
Water-hose tool use and showering behavior by Asian elephants
10 votes -
Google used millions of Android phones to map the worst enemy of GPS--the ionosphere
19 votes -
Digging into the first work of modern ecology
6 votes -
Turtle genomes fold in a special way
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The US has a cloned sheep contraband problem
27 votes -
Better know a bird: The wild and kinky mating rituals of the crested auklet
16 votes -
Plants really do 'scream'. We've simply never heard them until now.
30 votes -
Mitochondria are alive
14 votes -
Proving that SU(2) is compact (and other group theory bits)
2 votes -
Watch electricity hit a fork in the road at half a billion frames per second
18 votes -
This spider scientist wants us to appreciate the world's eight-legged wonders
6 votes -
Giant rats in tiny vests trained to sniff out illegally trafficked wildlife
21 votes -
DebunkBot
10 votes -
Thirty-year species reintroduction experiment shows evolution unfolding in slow motion
15 votes -
Yes, we did discover the Higgs!
9 votes -
A scientific fraud. An investigation. A lab in recovery.
20 votes -
New research uncovers why our brains are effective at quickly processing short messages
14 votes -
New largest prime number found! 2¹³⁶²⁷⁹⁸⁴¹-1. See all 41,024,320 digits.
36 votes -
Can we ever detect the graviton? (No, but why not?)
26 votes -
Using Euro coins as standard weights
11 votes -
Demis Hassabis, John M. Jumper and David Baker win the 2024 Nobel Prize for chemistry for their work on proteins
6 votes -
The hidden world of electrostatic ecology
7 votes -
Why is the speed of light so fast?
26 votes -
Making an atomic trampoline
13 votes -
Scores of papers by Eliezer Masliah, prominent neuroscientist and top NIH official, fall under suspicion
25 votes -
Patent law is broken (USA) and EU (sort of)
24 votes -
Scientific rigor proponents retract paper on benefits of scientific rigor
13 votes -
Academic publishers face class action over ‘peer review’ pay, other restrictions
34 votes -
First-ever mRNA vaccine halts pancreatic cancer in its tracks
50 votes -
Ig Nobel prizes 2024: The unexpected science that won this year
14 votes -
Scientists receive Ig Nobel Prize for discovering mammals can breathe through anuses
43 votes -
Study finds people are consistently and confidently wrong about those with opposing views
37 votes -
What happens when you touch a Pickle to an AM radio tower?
36 votes -
Meet the winners of the 2024 Ig Nobel Prizes
26 votes -
The theory that men evolved to hunt and women evolved to gather is wrong
58 votes -
Synthetic diamonds are now purer, more beautiful, and vastly cheaper than mined diamonds. Beating nature took decades of hard graft and millions of pounds of pressure.
63 votes -
Statistics are still misunderstood in the courtroom
16 votes -
Cognitive behavioral therapy enhances brain circuits to relieve depression in subset of depression patients
7 votes -
AI for bio: State of the field
2 votes -
Did Sandia use a thermonuclear secondary in a product logo?
41 votes -
Is accidentally stumbling across the unknown a key part of science?
7 votes -
Researchers make mouse skin transparent using a common food dye
24 votes -
A cooperative biological perspective on competition and reproductive success in humans
Hi, there is a common trend among people in both physical and online circles: the idea that not reproducing means less reproductive success, so it means less "evolutionary success" for the...
Hi, there is a common trend among people in both physical and online circles: the idea that not reproducing means less reproductive success, so it means less "evolutionary success" for the individual. On an isolated level, the first part is true. However, a lot of people attach value-judgements to this, and wonder whether they are betraying the species by choosing not to reproduce. A lot of intellectual people even consider if they're "dumbing down" the species. And a lot of people think this must constitute some kind of paradox: more intelligence means less reproduction.
There's a lot to be said about this. First is the good ol' (and kind of boring) idea that evolution is not going toward "higher" beings, but simply a change in inherited traits in a population among generations. However, this is not my point in this post.
What I want people to consider is how much variety there is between individuals: only 0.1% of DNA differ between two individuals from the species Homo sapiens. This means the other 99.9% is the same. Despite however much media, intellectuals, and individuals might focus on differences between people, the genome is 99.9% the same.
But what if the 0.1% is so vital that it exerts an outsized influence on the rest of the genome? Well, first of all, at some level it doesn't matter. There is a reason the phrase "evolution by natural selection" is often used, instead of just using the term natural selection. It's because evolution and natural selection are not interchangeable. As stated before, evolution is a change in inherited traits in the population between generations. This includes four forces: selection, mutation, migration, and genetic drift.
Selection, as is known, tends to preserve traits that are more adapted to their environment. Mutation is the spontaneous origination of a new variation in the genome. Migration is individuals migrating to or out of a population. And genetic drift is random variation that happens between generations due to chance.
These mechanisms, taken together, determine the change of inherited traits between generations. However vital, natural selection is by far not the only means.
But-wait?! You were talking about populations, and not individuals. Why?
Well, it's because evolution makes the most sense at population level. You can't really examine the change of traits on an individual level. It's micro of the micro of the microevolution. Furthermore, at macro level (species to species evolution; speciation) it's populations that evolve, not individuals.
This is another key takeaway: in evolution, populations matter the most, not individuals.
Other than the 99.9% sameness in DNA, you can also see this in the genome structure. For the most part, we share the same number of chromosomes, structured in the same way, with genes interspersed at places that are mostly at the same part.
Supporting this, here are the current known numbers of genes in the genome, according to different sources. There is no evidence that the number of these genes differ significantly between individuals. Sure, the variations (alleles) of the exact content change very often. But not the existence of the genes themselves.
So, we not only share vast majority of the same DNA, but the way DNA and genes are structured is also almost exactly the same.
Let's summarize what I've said so far.
- Population level evolution matters the most in evolution.
- We share 99.9% of our DNA.
- We have almost the exact same genome structure.
- We have virtually the same genes (but not alleles).
Why have I said all this? Created this topic?
It's to counter the perspective that is so pervasive in culture, including intellectual spaces. The idea that not reproducing somehow makes you "unnatural", or "against laws of nature". There is, of course, already the ethical rebuttal against these claims: that natural doesn't mean good. However, what I've laid out here is also a different side of nature that is rarely talked about: in evolutionary terms, we are almost the same.
Following this logic, it can be seen that, even if you don't personally reproduce, contributing to the well-being of the population or the species means you are contributing to the inheritence of 99.9% of your DNA, its overall structure, and its gene structure. After all, your contributions make it so that other people can reproduce, and pass on these commonalities they share with you. You are not, in normative terms, "an evolutionary failure". It can even be argued that, at the current connected level of internationality where populations are quite dependent on each other, and exchange DNA with each other frequently, a global cooperative approach can even be considered the most succesful strategy.
As with most things in culture, when interpreting biology, the role of competition and dissimilarity is overemphasized, and the role of cooperation and similarity is overlooked, even when it runs counter to a lot of scientific findings. Funnily enough, Peter Kropotkin, who lived most of his life in the second part of the 19th century, realized this. Of course, he didn't have even remotely enough scientific evidence. But looking at nature, he had realized how much the role of cooperation was ignored, due to a fixation on competition. So, this is not a new problem, and my reasoning is not entirely new.
Further reading on this topic could be made by searching for "evolution cooperation" on the search engine of your choice, and on Google Scholar.
4 votes -
The asteroid-in-spring hypothesis - Two paleontologists have turned on each other, each claiming to have found new evidence about the worst day on Earth
8 votes