Mathematician said:I find it ironic how evolutionists accept a single common ancestory for all life yet are so quick to reject a single common ancestory for humans.
Who does that?
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Mathematician said:I find it ironic how evolutionists accept a single common ancestory for all life yet are so quick to reject a single common ancestory for humans.
You miss the point. Three times the size (volume) and three times the mass is the SAME density, not three times the density as you demanded:mark kennedy said:Yes, I know it is a silly claim and an impossibility but none the less this is exactly what would have had to happen for us to have a common ancestor with the chimpanzee.
.. triple in size weight and density.
No. As soon as you can show me evidence of a genetic bottleneck of one man and one woman at the same time period, I'll be happy to reconsider.Mathematician said:Ed, Tom,
Do you both believe we descended from one man and one woman?
Mathematician said:Ed, Tom,
Do you both believe we descended from one man and one woman?
Tomk80 said:No. As soon as you can show me evidence of a genetic bottleneck of one man and one woman at the same time period, I'll be happy to reconsider.
However, common ancestry talks about populations, not about single organisms.
Praxiteles said:Perhaps you missed the bit where he said "at the same time period".
But those two are considered to be our most recent common ancestor for a female and a male. No one disputes that.
Mathematician said:I didn't miss it. That's why I had the comment about Eve's husband.
We've had a lot of people disputing bottlenecks on this forum. One was just a few posts before mine.
Except for the dating issue, YECs and evolutionists agree that all people had a common female ancestor "Eve" at some point in the past and some common male ancestor "Noah" more recently. Why the denials from evolutionists that these people existed?
Don't you find it interesting that some book written thousands of years ago agrees with the latest science? (The Babylonian redactors were just lucky I guess.)
Indeed, if I recall correctly, the common male ancestor of all humans is many thousands of years further back than the common female ancestor. The reason it's not so widely mentioned is that finding a common male ancestor is not nearly as precise as finding a common female ancestor. This is because midochondrial DNA mutates at a MUCH slower rate than cellular DNA, and thus is much more accurate for approximate dating...Praxiteles said:Uh huh. Except Eve's husband is not our most recent common ancestor in the male line. So no bottleneck.
Most recent common ancestor =/= genetic bottleneck. I think that that is the source of your confusion.
Praxiteles said:Uh huh. Except Eve's husband is not our most recent common ancestor in the male line. So no bottleneck.
Most recent common ancestor =/= genetic bottleneck. I think that that is the source of your confusion.
Deamiter said:Indeed, if I recall correctly, the common male ancestor of all humans is many thousands of years further back than the common female ancestor. The reason it's not so widely mentioned is that finding a common male ancestor is not nearly as precise as finding a common female ancestor. This is because midochondrial DNA mutates at a MUCH slower rate than cellular DNA, and thus is much more accurate for approximate dating...
And now I'm WAY over my head, so forgive me if I've gotten something basic wrong. I DO know, however, that our common male ancestor was much further back (and is dated much less precisely) than our common female ancestor.
Deamiter said:I DO know, however, that our common male ancestor was much further back (and is dated much less precisely) than our common female ancestor.
Mathematician said:No YEC has ever said that Eve's husband was the most recent common ancestor in the male line. They've all said that some more recent male, Noah, was.
As for my not understanding bottlenecks, please go read what Aron-Ra wrote. That provides the context for Mark's and ultimately my comments.
The paper I read some months ago indicated that it resulted in a defective receptor that made it difficult, if not impossible for the virus to attach to the T-Cell. Like the ASPM gene producing a defective spindle resulting in a smaller brain, this is a change in alleles over time but not adaptive evolution. There is no selective advantage from a defective receptor or a malformed spindle.
You do the math Aron-Ra, there are 35 million nucleotide substitutions, five million indels and they had to be fixed genome wide in 6 million years ago. This point has never been refuted or even substantivly addressed.
Deamiter said:Indeed, if I recall correctly, the common male ancestor of all humans is many thousands of years further back than the common female ancestor. The reason it's not so widely mentioned is that finding a common male ancestor is not nearly as precise as finding a common female ancestor. This is because midochondrial DNA mutates at a MUCH slower rate than cellular DNA, and thus is much more accurate for approximate dating...
And now I'm WAY over my head, so forgive me if I've gotten something basic wrong. I DO know, however, that our common male ancestor was much further back (and is dated much less precisely) than our common female ancestor.
I would figure she had. Kind of hard for human females to reproduce without a male companion. Furhtermore, although MtEve is the only one whose mitochondria have survived to this day, this does not mean she was the only woman at that time. There is no reason to think she wasn't part of a bigger population, including more females.Mathematician said:What about mitochondrial Eve, the proposed common ancestor to all humans who is estimated to have lived 150,000 years ago? Do you think she might have had a husband?
Good for Hugh Ross. I think he is talking BS here. Again, that Y-chromosomal Adam is the only one whose chromosome seems to have preserved to this day(although this is more tentative), this does not mean he was the only male in the population or that the population went through a bottleneck. Furthermore, don't you think it's curious that the two are so far apart, if Noah's flood really happened?What about Y-chromosomal Adam, another proposed common ancestor to all humans? He lived some 60,000 years ago. Hugh Ross (the biggest name OEC) calls this guy Noah.
Mathematician said:I find it ironic how evolutionists accept a single common ancestory for all life yet are so quick to reject a single common ancestory for humans.
you misunderstand, she is only the most recent common ancestor for all our mitochondria. it's quite possible that not a single one of her other genes has an ancestor today.Mathematician said:What about mitochondrial Eve, the proposed common ancestor to all humans who is estimated to have lived 150,000 years ago? Do you think she might have had a husband?
What about Y-chromosomal Adam, another proposed common ancestor to all humans? He lived some 60,000 years ago. Hugh Ross (the biggest name OEC) calls this guy Noah.