Origin And Evolution Of Life

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  • čas přidán 15. 05. 2009
  • / sciencereason ... From Big Bang To Man (Chapter 3): Origin (Abiogenesis) And Evolution Of Life.
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    FROM BIG BANG TO MAN:
    This is the story of the universe and our place within it. And if that's not enough, we will describe how every atom in existence today came into beeing, how galaxies formed, how our own solar system began. We will trace the progress of life on Earth from its humble beginnings to the emergence of mitochondrial Eve. And from Eve until now, we will follow the progress as humankind spread around the globe.
    1. The Baby Universe:
    • The Baby Universe
    2. The Present Universe:
    • The Present Universe
    3. Origin And Evolution Of Life:
    • Origin And Evolution O...
    4. The First Humans:
    • The First Humans
    5. Evolution Of Modern Humans:
    • Evolution Of Modern Hu...
    EVOLUTION IS REAL SCIENCE:
    1. Does The Evidence Support Evolution?
    • Does The Evidence Supp...
    2. Vitamin C And Common Ancestry
    • Vitamin C And Common A...
    3. Are We Descended From Viruses?
    • Human Evolution: Are W...
    4. Does The Fossil Record Support Evolution?
    • Does The Fossil Record...
    5. Where Are The Transitional Forms?
    • Evolution: Where Are T...
    FACTS OF EVOLUTION:
    1. Introduction
    • Facts Of Evolution
    2. Universal Common Descent
    • Facts Of Evolution: Un...
    3. Good Design, Bad Design
    • Facts Of Evolution: Go...
    4. Speciation And Extinction
    • Facts Of Evolution: Sp...
    5. How Fast Is Evolution?
    • How Fast Is Evolution?
    6. What Can Embryos Tell Us About Evolution?
    • What Can Embryos Tell ...
    7. The Molecules Of Life
    • Facts Of Evolution: Th...
    8. Molecular Evolution: Genes And Proteins
    • Molecular Evolution: G...
    9. Retroviruses And Pseudogenes
    • Facts Of Evolution: Re...
    ---
    The Cassiopeia Project - making science simple!
    The Cassiopeia Project is an effort to make high quality science videos available to everyone. If you can visualize it, then understanding is not far behind.
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @nobodycares3900
    @nobodycares3900 Před 8 lety +11

    i love how he said somehow 0:30.......

    • @DK-py2qx
      @DK-py2qx Před 6 lety +3

      Suppose one day we did not have to say 'somehow'? Are you pinning all your hope on this one mystery or if this one is solved one day will that finally be enough for you? The wall of the unexplainable continues to be pushed back. How much will you push back?

    • @DK-py2qx
      @DK-py2qx Před 4 lety

      The way he explains it. It certainly is.
      No, we don’t know and currently you are correct. It is impossible. But, what if progress on the problem continues to be made and one day a breakthrough happens - just for a second suppose it does - what will you say then?

  • @nlbmsportin
    @nlbmsportin Před 15 lety +6

    I can watch these vids along with Sagan and Dawkins all day long.
    Thanks for the contributions to general curiosity in higher academia.
    I'm studying to be an electrical engineer and get plenty of good ole physics, but am also fascinated by evolutionary biology.

  • @scottseptember1992
    @scottseptember1992 Před 12 lety +1

    This video is such a wonderfully generalized representation of the Geological Record and the events that took (and are still taking and to take place) place within.

  • @user-yr3rz7vb8r
    @user-yr3rz7vb8r Před 6 měsíci

    Fantastic video keep it up

  • @smokethat6131
    @smokethat6131 Před 8 lety +20

    Life is so interesting... but it can sometimes be a pain.

  • @eveofneverland
    @eveofneverland Před 12 lety +3

    THANK YOU VERY MUCH. You have restored my faith that other humans have the ability to think logically.

  • @ReZdItalia
    @ReZdItalia Před 9 lety +2

    The very essence of life is fascinating... The fact that atomic structures of non-living matter were able to, by chance, assemble into self-replicating chains of chemical reactions is truly magnificent.

  • @Justwantahover
    @Justwantahover Před 10 lety +2

    You didn't mention how the first vertebrates started. I've heard that vertebrates come from the sponge lava. It developed a stiff inner bracing inside and along it's body. And internal skeletons came from that.

  •  Před 7 lety +11

    0:30 somehow?? please explain how life can casually come into existence from dead matter.

    • @lylepaulson5432
      @lylepaulson5432 Před 7 lety +4

      It is the religion of science. It requires lots of faith to believe in the unprovable.

    •  Před 7 lety +2

      Lyle Paulson I agree

    • @roytwo
      @roytwo Před 7 lety +13

      We all know life was created by a great invisible sky wizard, science, pzzzzzz!

    • @nehanelly3634
      @nehanelly3634 Před 7 lety +5

      see we evolved from combination of atoms,atoms are non living matter. so living beings evolved from non living matter

    • @khorps4756
      @khorps4756 Před 7 lety +2

      RNA

  • @Chad5143
    @Chad5143 Před 10 lety +17

    Unfortunately, words like "somehow" or "once the cells learned how to protect itself" kind of leave huge gaping holes in the answer to the question "How?"

    • @ketanovas
      @ketanovas Před 10 lety +13

      Unfortunately, those gaping holes are filled with gods...

    • @HarshColby
      @HarshColby Před 10 lety +4

      The evidence shows the "how" was chemistry and evolution. This video is a very high-level summary. The detailed answers are contained in scientific papers, most of which are available to the public.

    • @gamesbok
      @gamesbok Před 10 lety +1

      Once you have self replication the method of learning is easy. It's prototyping on a massive scale, same way all evolution works. This applies to advanced tricks, like protecting the hox genes and letting the others vairy. Early life had an extra trick, not generally available to higher life, horizontal gene transfer.

    • @HarshColby
      @HarshColby Před 10 lety +1

      onsaphi Nice. So wrong on every point...except the dying part, which any ancient goat herder would have known. Have any nice palm tree recipes to share?

    • @billskinner7670
      @billskinner7670 Před 6 lety +3

      It's an 11 minute video! How much detail do you want?

  • @boyofGod81
    @boyofGod81 Před 11 lety

    good job Liam, great start to humor. with your profile pic who would doubt it though, have a great week

  • @ylekiote99999
    @ylekiote99999 Před 11 lety +2

    When I was young, it seemed that life was so wonderful, a miracle, it was beautiful, magical
    And all the birds in the trees, well they'd be singing so happily, joyfully, playfully, watching me
    But then they send me away to teach me how to be sensible, logical, responsible, practical
    And they showed me a world where I could be so dependable, clinical, intellectual, cynical......

  • @SprigganFR
    @SprigganFR Před 9 lety +12

    So I noticed something in this that I knew but never thought about before, oxygen was once poisonous to all life, it was a gas that killed a huge amount of organisms as it became more prevalent until they adapted to it. Well what if the future of life on earth lives off something other than oxygen? What if all the harmful stuff going into the ozone that will one day be the downfall of man if not solved is actually setting up the basis for life in the future? Yes it seems unlikely that life would one day live off something other than oxygen, but with massive deforestation still going on, and carbon emissions still at or near all time highs it could turn into an adapt or die scenario. It's just a thought, and it might be way off base because it's not like I've been researching evolution for years or anything, but if it's happened before it seems like it could happen again.

    • @eduardonava6284
      @eduardonava6284 Před 7 lety +1

      That was an interesting read. Which also makes you wonder what other life in the universe lives off of. Unless we got lucky and hit the ultimate lottery of having life evolve on a planet. Only life in the universe, highly unlikely.
      "Two possibilities exist: either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying."
      Arthur C. Clarke

  • @l337pwnage
    @l337pwnage Před 9 lety +5

    This video looks like a pre-school version of a science lesson, which explains why religious people can't figure it out.

  • @rishabhrana5529
    @rishabhrana5529 Před 9 lety

    Thanks for the video.....i loved it.....it explained too much in just about 11 minutes

  • @rosanworld304
    @rosanworld304 Před 7 lety

    you are doing well job by teaching

  • @myleswu9957
    @myleswu9957 Před 8 lety +12

    219 dislikes = 219 RELIGITARDS.

  • @Showtube887
    @Showtube887 Před 9 lety +3

    Ugh.... I'm gunna make this real quick.. "Then God said, let there be light..." Your welcome..

    • @logmeindangit
      @logmeindangit Před 8 lety +1

      Ugh... I'm "gunna" make this real (really) quick. It's "YOU'RE" welcome, grey cloud. Punctuation matters.

    • @Showtube887
      @Showtube887 Před 8 lety +2

      Oh no! I miss spelled a word! What ever shall I do?! Back up man. It's honestly not a big deal.

  • @yvonnethompson844
    @yvonnethompson844 Před 10 lety +1

    there is a show if you want, it's called "where did we com e from" it's part of a series called "through the worm hole" it goes into more detail as to the stuff that this video is talking about. this isn't a joke, it's based on what we find in the rocks, one of the places where we find info on early life is the "cambrian explosion" look it up, the critters were awesome.

  • @BlueOrenjii-oc5jv
    @BlueOrenjii-oc5jv Před rokem

    fascinating

  • @KittenKoder
    @KittenKoder Před 12 lety

    I am in love with this video.

  • @LemonGrassScented
    @LemonGrassScented Před 11 lety

    Very simplistic answer to an extremely complex question.

  • @blssdfall27
    @blssdfall27 Před 13 lety

    Exactly what I'm looking for..

  • @Yehyasafwat
    @Yehyasafwat Před 6 lety

    I think it is basically about the most important part which you skipped with high finesse ;).
    The point in the very beginning where you say:
    “Then when the storm cleared there was something new. A cell which has the ability to ... etc”
    This is the point worth discussing, the rest of the video is based on the ultimate resolution of this point.
    If you have an explanation to this point please do share or else this is just another beautifully made video with nothing new.
    Thanks.

    • @Roylamx
      @Roylamx Před 2 lety

      Yehya Safwat; at 0:16 he said it was a miracle. I'd say 1st of many.

  • @maync1
    @maync1 Před rokem

    What a wonderfully illustrated fairy tale.

  • @alaizahmatias3428
    @alaizahmatias3428 Před 7 lety

    Where can i find the song used in this song pls?

  • @DeanHiltonYoung
    @DeanHiltonYoung Před 11 lety

    Yes. I've already answered this in my reply to Immuuni.

  • @DeanHiltonYoung
    @DeanHiltonYoung Před 11 lety +1

    Hi mtbee9, many thanks for the reply - but, who has pulled the Hoax apart? I would be really interested in reading the material. After you have supplied the details, I would like you to answer a very basic question. Organisms select from existing genetic traits, so no matter how they adapt and change, they remain the same organism. Where has anyone observed an increase in genetic info that allows one organism to become a completely different organism? Not speciation, but fish to frog changes.

  • @xlimmerx
    @xlimmerx Před 13 lety

    what is the name of the soundtrack in the background?

  • @scottseptember1992
    @scottseptember1992 Před 12 lety

    You need to take an Introductory to Biological Science lecture along with Fundamentals of Chemistry, or just jump straight into Biochemistry.

  • @TDavis-bc9iw
    @TDavis-bc9iw Před 9 lety

    Hey there. Enjoyed the video. At 8:00 the amphibian used as an example is actually a reptile, it's a red headed skink.

  • @TheQeltar
    @TheQeltar Před 11 lety +1

    "intermediate between the two" means that this is a transitional fossil between fish and tetrapods. The Kenichthys had traits that are characteristic of both fish and tetrapods.

  • @WildCatsKitten1
    @WildCatsKitten1 Před 13 lety

    @transtlantic
    Can you answer my question on antibiotic resistance , is it micro or macro, give me a one word answer saying whether it is micro or macro,which is it?

  • @scottseptember1992
    @scottseptember1992 Před 12 lety

    This "information" you're referring to is characterized by how the molecules in the various nucleotides (which are monomers that make up the polymer of nucleic acids like DNA) chemically behave (involving electrons in the formation and breakage of bonds). There are distinct shapes that arise from bonding (linear, trigonal planar, tetrahedral, trigonal bipyramid, octahedral, etc) and these shapes are what represent information.

  • @dandanthedandan7558
    @dandanthedandan7558 Před 5 lety

    Is it just me or is the resolution of the video 144p even if 480p is selected?

  • @WildCatsKitten1
    @WildCatsKitten1 Před 13 lety

    @transtlantic
    yes it is, I am not asking you about the mechanisms and whether they are the same as your supposed macro evolution.
    I am asking you if antibiotic resistance is an observed instance of micro or macro evolution, which is it?

  • @WildCatsKitten1
    @WildCatsKitten1 Před 13 lety

    @transtlantic
    where is my mistake on wiki about microevolution?

  • @WildCatsKitten1
    @WildCatsKitten1 Před 13 lety

    @transtlantic
    hey don't get excited, i am just asking you, why do you believe that antibiotic resistance is an example of macro evolution?

  • @TheQeltar
    @TheQeltar Před 11 lety

    Naw, science ain't no religion. What science does is give us the best explanation based on the available facts.

  • @RjVjDjRAKESH
    @RjVjDjRAKESH Před 10 lety

    where is the next part??

  • @WildCatsKitten1
    @WildCatsKitten1 Před 13 lety

    @transtlantic
    where is my mistake on wiki about micro evolution?

  • @pur3k0
    @pur3k0 Před 12 lety

    Yes its actually very clear.

  • @MaximusArurealius
    @MaximusArurealius Před 13 lety

    The difference between micro and macro is this: Micro involves the individual mutating of a single gene which does not restructure the chromosome. Macro involves the entire restructuring of the chromosome all at once, which is not a gradual process. A chromosomal restructuring would be considered PART of macro evolution, but not the whole part. You need:
    1. Chromosomal restructurings.
    2. Morphological evolution.
    3. And finally, and most importantly, biochemical macro evolution.

  • @TheQeltar
    @TheQeltar Před 11 lety

    Science inspires great wonder in me. Just because you can explain things doesn't mean they are not beautiful.

  • @psuedoFRE4K
    @psuedoFRE4K Před 11 lety

    I stand corrected, I seem to have misread your comment to an extent.

  • @DeanHiltonYoung
    @DeanHiltonYoung Před 11 lety

    You don't even know what a straw man argument is. What argument did you make? That you can spell LOLOL or that you can copy and paste? You are a legend only in your own mind, mate.

  • @Jcolinsol
    @Jcolinsol Před 14 lety

    @articwave
    That is a very silly thing to say, considering I didn't mention the supernatural at all.

  • @KaptenN
    @KaptenN Před 13 lety +1

    This began as a great video on evolution, then just before the end it somehow turned into the begining of Walking With Dinosaurs.

  • @DeanHiltonYoung
    @DeanHiltonYoung Před 11 lety

    It's important that words such as ‘Evolution’ be used accurately & consistently. The theory of ‘Evo’ that the evolutionists are really promoting is the idea that particles turned into people over time, without any need for an intelligent Designer. The evolutionist Kerkut accurately defined this ‘general theory of Evolution’ (GTE) as ‘the theory that all the living forms in the world have arisen from a single source which itself came from an inorganic form.’ That's what the video above is about!

  • @AsratMengesha
    @AsratMengesha Před 5 lety

    This video is very good to entertain children. -Good fiction!!!

  • @iceclimber3
    @iceclimber3 Před 13 lety

    I never though of it this way....

  • @yvonnethompson844
    @yvonnethompson844 Před 10 lety

    there are fish with elbows, ones that live in conditions where fins just were not strong enough to help them move, like seaweed or fresh water wetlands, there the fin gets stronger and starts looking like an arm with a fin on the end, from there, the hands develop, some have been found with 7 -10 finger set ups. a well known one was called tiktaalik, eyes on top of his head, gills, scales, and "proto limbs"

  • @extremepietbh
    @extremepietbh Před 11 lety

    you are the exact sort of person that gets involved in what he's talking about.

  • @jamesanonymous2343
    @jamesanonymous2343 Před 7 lety

    Let me say this,The thread of life goes round & round & embraces us all,
    all creatures GREAT & SMALL. Be tolerant, be patient, have respect, and be at peace.

  • @extra222love
    @extra222love Před 13 lety

    @gamesbok
    Thank you for the comment, however, the following must be straightened out in order not to confuse readers with what really was produced in Lab:
    1- Eckard Wimmer, who led the study, denies that he has created life.
    "No, I would not say I created life in a test tube," Wimmer said in a telephone interview. "We created a chemical in a test tube that, when put into cells, begins to behave a little bit like something alive. Some people say viruses are chemicals and I belong to that group"

  • @Jcolinsol
    @Jcolinsol Před 14 lety

    @helltrackrider
    Have you, by chance, figured it out yet?

  • @3point14rat
    @3point14rat Před 10 lety

    This is a brief summary of the basic concepts of a topic you can spend a couple of lifetimes studying. Don't expect it to put all of your arguments to rest.
    Understanding the ideas related to evolution is similar to learning to ride a bike. You can't get it and are convinced you never will... until you can, and once you can, it's a breeze.
    Keep reading, watching and thinking and I promise you'll get it.

  • @ncwdane
    @ncwdane Před 11 lety

    Do you know the minimal Amino acids required for a lifeform(Types of amino acids) ?
    did the amino acids in the experiment last long or divide or evolve into somthing else ?
    that experiment as I said would be about the equivalent to a muddy pothole on a dirt road drying up & getting hard like adobe cause maybe some grass blew into it & you said you have bricks(the building blocks for a building) & then saying a building could make itself w/ electricity/plumbing/windows properly placed(not a cave)

  • @TheQeltar
    @TheQeltar Před 11 lety +1

    Sometimes it's okay to say "I don't know".

  • @mailtosadhana
    @mailtosadhana Před 11 lety

    Thank u so much for uploading this video..!!

  • @DeanHiltonYoung
    @DeanHiltonYoung Před 11 lety

    Half -flesh? Chicken tasting arms and fried frog legs? What are you looking for? Darwin promised all these gradations, not me.

  • @Thinkdeep420
    @Thinkdeep420 Před 12 lety

    SCIENCE RULES!!!!

  • @MrBillH60
    @MrBillH60 Před 14 lety

    @transtlantic
    *How the earth was formed: asteroids bumping into eachother*
    Playing marbles does not cause order. Have u ever played that game before? When play'n pool 1 starts with order then the "bumping into eachother" brings disorder from order.
    The only way this can bring order is to play at reverse, start from the end of game (end of time) then procede to the beginning of game (beginning of time). Then you're have order from disorder.
    Are we living in reverse?

  • @MaximusArurealius
    @MaximusArurealius Před 13 lety

    There were once considered to be 180 vestigial organs (organs of no use that evolutionists use to say we evolved out of). Today, there are medically regarded as being no vestigial organs. For example, the appendix is noted as able to fight infection in early life and tonsils destroy harmful bacteria. ([4], p.112)

  • @DeanHiltonYoung
    @DeanHiltonYoung Před 11 lety

    Kenichthys is a genus of sarcopterygian fish. The term comes from the Latin genus meaning "descent, family, type, gender." One living sarcopterygian is the coelacanth which was thought to have gone extinct 65 million years ago, but they are still happily swimming around today. The first one was caught off the coast of Africa in 1938.

  • @logmeindangit
    @logmeindangit Před 8 lety

    At 2:56 the narrator mispronounced "anemone" - he said "An enemy."

  • @IonianGarden
    @IonianGarden Před 11 lety

    Yes Trilobites were an abrupt apperance. 7 million years actually (if you call that abrupt). What started this chain reaction is increased levels of oxygen in the atmosphere. Presures of predior vs pray, search for food, ect. was the following driving force of the explosion.
    You asked for an animal from the cambrian that exist today. While Pikaia is not the direct decendent of virterbrates, it is however a close decendent. Namacalathus are some of the eailiest calcified metazoans (Animals).

  • @Feeetzy
    @Feeetzy Před 6 lety

    is this narrated by Tobias Fünke?

  • @pur3k0
    @pur3k0 Před 12 lety +1

    i started thinking about religion and questioning it i was;nt denying it but i was connecting the dots with the storys and all the concepts that didn't make sense. I was very confused and became depressed because i was scared of thinking for myself.Then i got into 10th grade biology class. What a class i learned about everything life the plants the humans the space the genetics the dna the structure of the human body and much more. I started questioning it more and more until 1 day.

  • @earlysda
    @earlysda Před 11 lety

    This is the meaning of "evolve" according to Webster's dictionary in 1828, before the Church of Evolution got started:
    Evolve:
    1. To unfold; to open and expand.
    2. To throw out; to emit.
    Nothing about "change" there.
    So you see, adherents of the Church of Evolution have tried to make words mean something than their original meaning to support their doctrines, much as the Catholic Church does with transubstantiation and other doctrines. Neither has observed evidence for their faith.

  • @extra222love
    @extra222love Před 13 lety

    @PAULOcbi
    By the way, I can disprove any other Life Origin Theory with a strong evidence!
    Why not we start the ride? ... Give suggestions

  • @Immuuni
    @Immuuni Před 11 lety

    What do you mean? I just corrected him that things like butterflies didn't come up by chance, it evolved by natural selection. All of the things he said can be explained by science.

  • @jbamralc
    @jbamralc Před 11 lety

    "when this molecule (the spiral shape) THAT MADE COPIES OF ITSELF... LEARNED TO PROTECT ITSELF". ¿When did life become inteligent? and designed?

  • @Immuuni
    @Immuuni Před 11 lety

    Hmh, what is the definition of word 'information' you are using?

  • @KHSVH
    @KHSVH Před 12 lety

    (أَوَلَمْ يَرَ الَّذِينَ كَفَرُوا أَنَّ السَّمَاوَاتِ وَالأَرْضَ كَانَتَا رَتْقًا فَفَتَقْنَاهُمَا وَجَعَلْنَا (مِنَ) الْمَاء كُلَّ شَيْءٍ حَيٍّ أَفَلا يُؤْمِنُونَ)
    إذا الحياة بدأت من الماء ، سبحان الله

  • @TheQeltar
    @TheQeltar Před 11 lety

    Here is some stuff copypasted from a site on transitional fossils:
    "Most fish have anterior and posterior external nostrils. In tetrapods, the posterior nostril is replaced by the choana, an internal nostril opening into the roof of the mouth. Kenichthys, a 395-million-year-old fossil from China, is exactly intermediate between the two, having nostrils at the margin of the upper jaw (Zhu and Ahlberg 2004)."

  • @bheadh
    @bheadh Před 12 lety

    @djay00009 No, I didn't call the Big-bang "wrong". It's the origin of the event that I question here.

  • @boyofGod81
    @boyofGod81 Před 11 lety

    this is where science and humanist religious thought evolved together. God's best at u

  • @minorreb
    @minorreb Před 11 lety

    Trilobite decline is attributable to their physiological limitations and their inefficient moulting. Unlike modern crustaceans they didn't reabsorb useful shell minerals and split their exoskeletons neatly along standard sutures & so were highly vulnerable to increased predation as ocean temperatures changed. Trilobites beautifully illustrate the complete absence of intelligent design.

  • @ilokivi
    @ilokivi Před 12 lety

    @Backtothebibleminist Epilepsy is a neurological disorder arising from a chemical imbalance within the brain and should not be confused with mental illness or insanity.

  • @insanetubegain
    @insanetubegain Před 11 lety

    Where there is evidence, no one speaks of 'faith'. We do not speak of faith that two and two are four or that the earth is round. We only speak of faith when we wish to substitute emotion for evidence.

  • @hainetkorea
    @hainetkorea Před 2 lety

    The origin of life on Earth is chemical synthesis. Cellulose in marine algae (green seaweed) is a cell.

  • @MaximusArurealius
    @MaximusArurealius Před 13 lety

    5. "The charge of circular reasoning which has been lodged against the critically important paleontological evidence of evolution is not simply to be laughed off or ignored as evolutionists too commonly attempt to do. It quite plainly involves the presupposition of evolution, with numerous involved deductions based on that premise.

  • @TheQeltar
    @TheQeltar Před 11 lety

    He is controversial according to most other paleornithologists: "However, it (his work on the Arch) received very negative reviews from several paleontologists".

  • @WildCatsKitten1
    @WildCatsKitten1 Před 13 lety

    @transtlantic
    thanks for admitting that you do not believe that antibiotic resistance is macro evolution.

  • @mussman717word
    @mussman717word Před 11 lety

    Where's the rest of it?

  • @boyofGod81
    @boyofGod81 Před 11 lety

    thanks for the quick reply Tyrone. you know how many fish get eaten as eggs and minnows by there own parents, babies of all species are eaten in great quantities. mostly its survival of the luckiest.

  • @boyofGod81
    @boyofGod81 Před 11 lety

    happy to edjucate u here :) lenski is doing great work in micro evolution. the dna code is amazing. macroevolution is the problem. great hypothesis. not proved. God's best

  • @AbhishekRao1996
    @AbhishekRao1996 Před 11 lety

    bro doodelay ur 3rd question's answer is a complete "NO" since fertilizin and antifertilizin of chimps and humans are completely species specific so there is no chance of Offspring!!
    Other statements are 100% correct.
    Hats Off to ur knowledge man :)

  • @sachinraghavan4556
    @sachinraghavan4556 Před 8 lety

    Pikaia is unique because it's its own thing. Its own class, order, family, genus, and species.

    • @DK-py2qx
      @DK-py2qx Před 6 lety

      Are you certain it is unique in your mentioned respects?

  • @MrBillH60
    @MrBillH60 Před 14 lety

    @transtlantic
    *if events of the past left marks, you can infer what happened.*
    You say I'm "ignoring this fact" but you said the samething I said, just worded differently.
    "if events of the past left marks", such as news papers, books (Bible), paintings on cave walls, documents, cities unearthed, these such forms of witnesses, "you can infer what happened."

  • @Immuuni
    @Immuuni Před 11 lety

    What do you mean? Mutations do add and subtract genetic information.

  • @BenjaminGoose
    @BenjaminGoose Před 12 lety

    I'm sorry, but I trust the centuries of work by our greatest minds more than I trust a single (non-scientist) person such as yourself.

  • @MaximusArurealius
    @MaximusArurealius Před 13 lety

    @MrMegaMouthDouchebag,
    Hi translantic

  • @Cpt.Zenobia
    @Cpt.Zenobia Před 13 lety

    @Sceraph i said im not a biologist.

  • @DeanHiltonYoung
    @DeanHiltonYoung Před 11 lety

    Information as in the way DNA is coded, arranged or sequenced in the gene. If there is a code, there must be a limited set of genetic instructions for an organism to obtain and maintain viability.

  • @DeanHiltonYoung
    @DeanHiltonYoung Před 11 lety

    Only from existing info already in the genome. For a detailed account, visit creation.com/mutations-new-information

  • @extra222love
    @extra222love Před 13 lety

    @gamesbok
    This might describe what been achieved in Lab so far.
    Thanks to the inspirer ... Dr. Frankenstein ... lol

  • @chavvajyoshna
    @chavvajyoshna Před 3 lety

    I have doubt that, in this video the photosynthesis organisms are revolved before O2 has developed

  • @nothin4092
    @nothin4092 Před 9 lety +1

    Somehow, someway, it happened this way. 4 BILLION YEARS AGO. BILLION. WITH A B. 4,000,000,000. NINE ZEROES.

    • @WizzleTeats69
      @WizzleTeats69 Před 8 lety

      +John R in order for genetic material to replicate, it would need to start out in a cell. so life couldn't have started without a cell somehow with all the complexity coming together by chance