Via a Facebook friend and sometime contributor here (Psiclops), some news on evolution research.
Not, this time, a direct challenge to the general understanding of Darwinian evolution but this paper seems to overturn the textbook view of human and animal diversity and the appearance of most animal species alive today. This study contends that 90% of those animals appeared at about the same time, only 100,000 - 200,000 years ago.
https://phys.org/news/2018-05-gene-surve...ution.html
The actual paper can be found here: https://phe.rockefeller.edu/news/wp-cont...educed.pdf
Not, this time, a direct challenge to the general understanding of Darwinian evolution but this paper seems to overturn the textbook view of human and animal diversity and the appearance of most animal species alive today. This study contends that 90% of those animals appeared at about the same time, only 100,000 - 200,000 years ago.
https://phys.org/news/2018-05-gene-surve...ution.html
Quote:... Mark Stoeckle from The Rockefeller University in New York and David Thaler at the University of Basel in Switzerland, who together published findings last week sure to jostle, if not overturn, more than one settled idea about how evolution unfolds.
It is textbook biology, for example, that species with large, far-flung populations—think ants, rats, humans—will become more genetically diverse over time.
But is that true?
"The answer is no," said Stoeckle, lead author of the study, published in the journal Human Evolution.
For the planet's 7.6 billion people, 500 million house sparrows, or 100,000 sandpipers, genetic diversity "is about the same," he told AFP.
The study's most startling result, perhaps, is that nine out of 10 species on Earth today, including humans, came into being 100,000 to 200,000 years ago.
"This conclusion is very surprising, and I fought against it as hard as I could," Thaler told AFP.
That reaction is understandable: How does one explain the fact that 90 percent of animal life, genetically speaking, is roughly the same age? Was there some catastrophic event 200,000 years ago that nearly wiped the slate clean?
Quote:And yet—another unexpected finding from the study—species have very clear genetic boundaries, and there's nothing much in between.
"If individuals are stars, then species are galaxies," said Thaler. "They are compact clusters in the vastness of empty sequence space."
The absence of "in-between" species is something that also perplexed Darwin, he said.
The actual paper can be found here: https://phe.rockefeller.edu/news/wp-cont...educed.pdf
I do not make any clear distinction between mind and God. God is what mind becomes when it has passed beyond the scale of our comprehension.
Freeman Dyson
Freeman Dyson