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Spanish tutorial
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/2195925/GinnettiSpanishtutorial.m4v
The purpose of are video was to help Ms.Gierke’s friend Noah conjugate verbs. We Split are jobs into three parts, Visuals, The Script, and Filming. We tried are best to break down and teach the changing of verbs in past and present tenses. We were told we should do this by explaining what we did over the summer, so that Noah could develop a deeper understanding on past and present tense verbs. We hope that Noah has learned a lot from are video and that he has found it easier to communicate to others!
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URl
Are humans Still evolving?
Humans are still evolving. It has been argued that the way that society is set up means that virtually everyone will reproduce, ruling out the selection pressures which were once driving us to evolve. Though in truth, we're evolving faster then ever, Or as Dr. John Hawks said, "The widespread assumption that human evolution has slowed down because it's easier to live and we've conquered nature is absolutely not true. We didn't conquer nature, we changed it in ways that created new selection pressures on us."
A study, led by Dr. John Hawks, has found that humans are evolving up to 100 times faster in the last 5000 years then they have been since we split with the ancestors of Chimps. The study has also found that humans are becoming more genetically diverse, depend on what part of the world they live in. such as the gene for lighter skin in northern Europe, or the African population becoming resistant to Malaria. Or how a majority of the Chinese and African population cannot digest lactose in milk, but a majority of Europeans have a lactose-tolerance gene. One reason could be that in northern Europe there is less sunlight and its lower in intensity, so people make less vitamin D in their skin. Vitamin D is critical for absorbing calcium, so people in Europe needed to be able to digest lactose to increase the amount of Vitamin D they have.
Does evolution stop once a species has become a "species?"
Well my question was, does evolution stop once a species has become a “species?” And from what I have researched, evolution does not stop once a species becomes a species. Every population of living organisms is enduring some sort of evolution. Even though they’re undergoing a some sort of change, though the extent speed of the process varies significantly from one group to another. Populations that experience a great change in environmental conditions, whether that change comes in the form of a new predator or a new island to disperse to, evolve much more quickly than do populations in a more stable set of conditions. This is because evolution is driven by natural selection, and because when the environment changes, selective pressures change, favoring one portion of the population more heavily than it was favored before the change.
"Evolution: Frequently Asked Questions." PBS: Public Broadcasting Service. Web. 12 Nov. 2010. <http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/faq/cat05.html#Q03>
Darwin's Evolution and Positivism
Comte's friend and colleague, Herbert Spencer, was an ardent positivist.He believed that all behavior of life on earth could be explained by natural selection. In several essays extolling the virtues of physical beauty, Spencer writes that unattractive physical features are signs of more significant hereditary traits - stupidity, for example - hence their (to his mind) repulsive quality.
Comte's positivism was supported by the discovery of the chemical structure of DNA in 1953. The idea that a person was the sum of their DNA - a mass of pre-written and unchangeable code - was a highly deterministic one.
In 1990, the Human Genome Project challenged this way of thinking. It was found that different strands of DNA could be interpreted differently. An experiment was conducted in which sequences of firefly DNA were inserted into the genome of E. Coli. One sequence encoded a protein that would make the bacteria glow red; the other would make it glow green. Together, the two sequences ought to have made the E. Coli produce yellow light. For some individual bacteria, this was the case. But others produced orange light, and still others incandesced turquoise. The same gene sequence produced different effects. In humans, identical sequences of genes are expressed in varying ways. Blue eyes are not all the same shade of blue; twins are never perfectly identical. Organisms are more than their genetics.
A non-deterministic world means that we are not limited by our physiology. We are forever capable of change.
Works Cited
Lehrer, Jonah. Proust Was a Neuroscientist. New York: Mariner Books, 2008. Print.
Spencer, Herbert. First Principles. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1897. Web. 10 Nov. 2010.
Comte, Auguste. A General View of Positivism. New York: E.P Dutton & Co., 1848. Web. 10 Nov 2010.
Is Jealousy an Evolutionary Adaptation?
“Despite its tragic
impact on the modern world (the overwhelming majority of mate battering and
spousal murders worldwide is caused by jealous violence), jealousy very likely
emerged around 3.5 million years ago in our hominid ancestors as evolutionary adaptive
response of vital evolutionary value for both genders”, according to Jorge N.
Ferrer. Jealousy provided as an evolutionary adaptation for males to assure
paternity and to avoid spending resources on other male’s offspring.
Furthermore, females use jealousy to guarantee protection and support for her
offspring by having a steady partner. This might explain why men feel intense
feelings of jealousy if they suspect their partner of sexual infidelity and why
women feel intense jealousy when they suspect their partner of emotional
attachment with someone else. Interestingly enough, this modern analysis
provides a connection between “gender- specific jealousy” and jealousy as an evolutionary
adaptation.
Moreover, a new study
at University Of Portsmouth challenges the scientific belief that only humans
and chimpanzee are able to experience “secondary emotions” such as jealousy,
shame and pride. They found that dogs demonstrate human-like jealousy when
another human or animal are brought in to make a “love triangle.” Scientists
found that dogs get particularly jealous when their owner showed affection to
an outside party. Scientist from the University reported dogs demonstrated
jealousy 80 percent of the time.
Additionally,
according to evolutionary psychology, jealousy is a genetic instinct used to
enable possessiveness. This allows monogamy to become possible. Jealousy is
simply a defense mechanism that might naturally occur if the joy of his or her
partner were to arise because of someone else. Polygamists (those who life an
alternative lifestyle where a man may have more than one spouse) commonly
dismiss their natural instincts. For example, the Kerista community of San
Franisco has coined the term “compersion” which is said to be a
“non-sexual state of empathetic happiness and joy experienced when an
individual's romantic partner experiences happiness and joy through an outside
source, including, but not limited to, another romantic interest.”
Citations
Ferrer, Jorge N.. "Monogamy, Polyamory, and Beyond." Tikkun 22.1 (2007): 37-43, 60-2. OmniFile Full Text Mega. Web. 28 Oct. 2010.
http://www.physorg.com/news75357071.html
What Effect Has Evolution Had on The Human Brain Thus Far?
The most complicated object in the known universe is the human brain. On average, our brain contains about eleven billion neurons. Each one working to send, receive and process electrochemical signals. Our thoughts, emotions, movements and very existence are dependent on processes within the brain that are still largely a mystery to us. One may wonder how such a wondrous and complex organ came to be. It is here that we begin to decipher the effect of evolution on the human brain.
Assuming the theory of evolution, that organisms more suited to their environment can survive better and mate, it makes sense that, somehow, having a larger and more complex brain makes survival on Earth easier. Indeed, if one were to look at the brain size of our hominid ancestors from four million years ago, it would be discovered that their brains were a mere 400 grams. Compare that to the present size- over 1400 grams (1.4kg).
But it was more than sheer size that changed, but the actual structure of the brain. What happened earliest was the centralization of the brain’s nerve cells. What started as a loose and messy grouping of cells that would be seen in a jellyfish, turned into a spinal column and enlarged fore- and hindbrain. These parts of the brain that are relatively new are known as neocortical, literally “new brain”. Actually, things such as our abilities to speak, plan, and be conscious of our own existence depend on neocortical structures. This means that when the brain became more complex, we gained a completely different way to interact with our world. Language allowed humans to organize themselves and hunt more effectively- and having a larger and more complex brain allowed a higher capacity for intelligence, thought, and planning. These are all things that gave humanity an advantage against predators, prey, and the world’s wide variety of dangerous natural elements.
The brain also experienced a phenomenon known as encephalization, which is the concentration of sense organs and neurons in one part of the body. This is why the brain, olfactory sense, hearing, and sight are all housed in the head. This made it easier for the brain to work because the signals that neurons use wouldn’t have to travel as far if the brain is all in one place.
Evolution caused the brain to become larger, more complex, and more efficient. Much how we make our computers with more space, more speed and efficiency with every new generation (this excludes Apple, of course). There is certainly is proof of our brain’s effect on the world. Humans are definitely a thriving species. One may also consider the worldwide subjugation and abuse of animals to be proof of our dominance as a species.
But it is important to remember that neurology has only scratched the surface when it comes to the human brain. There are still plenty of things we don’t know, actually we don’t know most things. There could be all kinds of secrets within the brain waiting to be unlocked, like other senses, the power of thought, or ways to become more intelligent faster. All this would also make one wonder what evolutionary stage the brain will achieve in another thousand years.
Works Cited:
Evolution and the brain. (2010). Retrieved from http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v447/n7146/full/447753a.html
Without miracles 5 brain evolution and development. (2010). Retrieved from http://faculty.ed.uiuc.edu/g-cziko/wm/05.html
Humans are still evolving? Whaaat!
Curiosity And Humans
Topic: Why, as humans, must know the answers to questions such as evolution and other scientific theories?
David Quammen's "Was Darwin Wrong?" immediately allowed me to raise the question, why can't we just agree to disagree? Well, Quammen mentions that if you are skeptical by nature and are unfamiliar with science then those are the people who are unaware of the overwhelming evidence and confess that evolution is "'just' a theory." This statement allows me to believe that every human being has evolved to be curious, but to different degrees. Without our curiosity we would have built the civilization way have today. It probably all began in the following mind processing:
- Cavemen accidentally discover fire
- Is intrigued by the discovery
- Leads to creation and discovery
- Because of the new found way of life, there needs to be a new form of communication
- Experiments with manual communication
- Then to verbal communication
- New form of communication spread and changed with different communities
- After learning a more efficient way to communicate, a "civilized" way of living begins
Citations:
http://www.personal-development.com/chuck/curiosity.htm
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0411/feature1/fulltext.html
http://science.howstuffworks.com/environmental/life/evolution/curiosity1.htm
http://www.lorencoleman.com/cabinet_of_curiosities/curiosity2.jpg
Are Humans Still Evolving?
ScienceDaily completed a long-term experiment that explains all of these traits. They did a study of the same people and their children over the course of 60 years. Their conclusions showed that humans are still evolving, and children are becoming shorter and heavier.
Humans are still evolving, but how fast are things changing? “The changes may be slow and gradual, but the predicted rates of change are no different from those observed elsewhere in nature, the researchers say.” Humans aren’t going to be extinct anytime soon, but we will be eventually. The more technology we have, the less we rely on natural selection.
Evolution of Intelligence
http://www.indiana.edu/~origins/teach/A105/lectures/A105L12.html
found at http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/ee/origin-of-humans
Alexis Beckton
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Changes_taggart_hull_1112
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Jaccar Garcia
file:///Users/jgarcia/Desktop/Screen%20shot%202010-11-12%20at%209.05.47%20AM.png
The reason why i changed the size of the question was to make it pop out.