No monkey ever “turned” into a human. Evolution happens very slowly over millions of years through very small changes. Even when you look at human bodies over the last 1,000 years, you can see gradual changes.
I think you have a very Hollywood-like imagination of what a mutation is. In reality, mutations are usually small and unnoticeable changes in DNA, not dramatic transformations. The human genome contains about 3 × 10⁹ base pairs, and every time DNA is copied, small errors can occur.
In fact, each person is born with dozens of new mutations that were not present in their parents. Most of these changes have no effect at all, because they occur in non-coding regions or do not significantly alter how genes function.
This means that mutations are not rare, extraordinary events, they are a normal and constant part of biology. Every human carries mutations compared to their parents, and over many generations, these small changes can accumulate and contribute to evolution.
Some microorganisms use error-prone polymerases, which enable them to adapt rapidly to changing environments. For instance, mutations can arise that allow them to survive antibiotic exposure. More complex organisms do not benefit from this mechanism because they have much longer reproduction cycles.
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No monkey ever “turned” into a human.
why 'atheists think its clever to say stuff like this? just a fyi it makes you look disingenuous.
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Evolution happens very slowly over millions of years through very small changes.
'atheists have fantastic imaginations
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Even when you look at human bodies over the last 1,000 years, you can see gradual changes.
just people, we have fantastic variations in modern humans.
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I think you have a very Hollywood-like imagination of what a mutation is. In reality, mutations are usually small and unnoticeable changes in DNA, not dramatic transformations. The human genome contains about 3 × 10⁹ base pairs, and every time DNA is copied, small errors can occur.
In fact, each person is born with dozens of new mutations that were not present in their parents. Most of these changes have no effect at all, because they occur in non-coding regions or do not significantly alter how genes function.
This means that mutations are not rare, extraordinary events, they are a normal and constant part of biology. Every human carries mutations compared to their parents, and over many generations, these small changes can accumulate and contribute to evolution.
should be reading this
i agree with this except the last sentence
you believe mutations are some kind of grand building up process
i believe its a slow extinction process. dont know how anyone can believe a accidental process is going to write complex information. maybe you could do some research on the y chromosomes and what they say about it and the accumulations of mutations
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Some microorganisms use error-prone polymerases, which enable them to adapt rapidly to changing environments. For instance, mutations can arise that allow them to survive antibiotic exposure. More complex organisms do not benefit from this mechanism because they have much longer reproduction cycles.
fruit flies were used because they have a real fast reproductive process. they were mutated i dont know how many generations. couldnt get anything to change. well nothing positive anyway.