Maugena wrote:jay_a2j wrote:Maugena wrote:So if a trait becomes dominant amongst a population, that's not evolution?
That, actually, is exactly what evolution is.
Genetics. When I speak of evolution I speak of the belief of one species of animal becoming another. I have no problem with certain side issues that have nothing to do with an ape becoming a man. Things like genetics, adaptation etc. But if you want to continue to say that "brown eyes are dominate" thus evidence of evolution (an ape becoming a man), I'm going to have to respectfully disagree.
I'm sorry, jay_a2j, but you'll have to define for me when one species becomes another. Because honestly, I don't think you can.
I fully understand my stance on evolution.
Evolution comes with reproduction.
On the smallest scale, the next generation
is evolved.
The reason why
you can't see evolution is because you're looking for drastic changes in a single leap.
That just doesn't happen.
In order for such a thing to happen, the DNA in the sperm and egg of a human would have to be considerably fucked up.
Assuming that the sperm and egg are capable of creating a living being, despite being fucked up, the new being would have to be able to reproduce, for one, and be able to live long enough to see reproduction at least once in its lifetime.
Now hopefully the offspring would be more than a single creature-if the original creature only reproduced a single time, so it could have the potential to make a species of its own.
/endramble
Humans only produce a new generation within a general span of 15-50 years.
In order for you to see a drastic change in appearance in the species, you would probably have to outlive a dozen plus generations.
As for smaller scale organisms that reproduce at a faster rate, evolution is very,
very, apparent.
Honestly though, I'll give you another example because I doubt you got anything from that.
You say that a specific trait that becomes dominant cannot be evolution.
Why then would we have multiple types of human beings if it cannot be evolution?
White people
genetically have color-less skin?
Black people
genetically have dark skin?
Or perhaps there were only black people to begin with and then a few black people started moving north, had their skin become paler over some time to the point that it was a dominant feature in a particular region?
Seriously.
How do you define one creature being different from another? How do you classify a species?
If black != white, they must be different.
One or the other must have evolved to have lighter/darker skin. To what purpose? Who knows.
The point is that difference came from evolution. It's a smaller scale compared to just plain old monkeys, but it's
there nonetheless.
So accept it and move on.