Weird that they’re only probably sure they know how reproduction works.

  • @ChicoSuave
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    423 months ago

    It’s nice the person realized their story was full of holes and then started poking at them. I’m not sure I would have the confidence to tell bad fiction and then rip it apart with equally flawed logic. So brave.

  • gid
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    343 months ago

    To be fair, the concept of mitochondrial Eve still trips me out.

    • @Wogi
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      223 months ago

      At some point if you go back far enough, we’re all the direct descendants of the first two fish who decided to fuck.

      • gid
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        123 months ago

        Your comment spawned a delightful train of thought where I imagined all the other fish trying, and failing, to successfully fuck before these two fish stumbled on how to do it.

        • Flying SquidOP
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          63 months ago

          The invention of fish Viagra was an incredible discovery.

      • @JollyG
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        193 months ago

        It’s the most recent common female ancestor of all humanity, as determined by mitochondrial DNA.

        Or put another way. If everyone traced their family lines back through their mothers, mitochondrial eve would be the first point where all those lines converged on a single woman

        • gid
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          103 months ago

          It helps me to remember that mitochondrial Eve isn’t a fixed individual, as well.

          • @[email protected]
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            33 months ago

            Imagine being the last (female, strictly matrilineal) descendant of one of her daughters: “If I die without a daughter, the line of Alice will end and that bitch Caitlin will become the new Eve!”

            Hell, imagine fighting a secret war to extinguish the other line - now there’s a “secret society conspiracy” plot if I’ve ever seen one.

            • gid
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              23 months ago

              I’d watch that movie!

        • Flying SquidOP
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          3 months ago

          There’s also a Y-chromosomal Adam, but they lived many thousands of years apart. That seems very counterintuitive, but when it is explained to you by someone who knows what they’re talking about (i.e. not me), it does make sense.

          • gid
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            73 months ago

            Yeah when it’s explained to me I realise “of course, that makes so much sense”.

            And then I forget again, so I’m all Keanu-Reeves-whoa-face next time I think about it.

      • gid
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        133 months ago

        Mitochondrial Eve is just the most recent common female ancestor. So her mom would also be a common female ancestor, but not the most recent one.

  • Wytch
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    193 months ago

    Indeed this is quite a bullshit.

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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    113 months ago

    I had a coworker for a while who was maddeningly religious. The type who goes around making it his life’s mission trying to convert people – that is to say, constantly arguing with them, and pestering people about religion incessantly even in situations where it was totally inappropriate. Except he hung around in his own Evangelical echo chambers too much and apparently did not quite spend enough time sharpening his skills arguing with atheists on the internet. Towards the end, before he was fired, I was the only person he’d engage with anymore because I would at least argue with him rather than everyone else who would just tell him to fuck off.

    Anyway, one day he came at me with the old, “If we came from monkeys, why are there still monkeys?” I let the monkeys/apes part go. Instead asked him if dogs came from wolves, how come there are still wolves?

    He stood there with this vacant look on his face for like five full seconds. I know this sounds like one of those “and then everyone clapped” stories, but he really did. He should have had a little spinning loading icon hovering over his head. He didn’t have a snappy pre-memorized comeback for that one. (I believe the accepted creationist answer would be to mumble something about “microevolution vs. macroevolution,” or “humans breeding animals is different and doesn’t count,” or similar.)

    Unfortunately, this experience did not seem contribute to actually wising him up in any way.