Evolution from ape to man. From Proconsul to Homo heidelbergensis

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  • čas přidán 17. 08. 2019
  • For Millions of years, our planet has been floating in space. Millions of creatures have lived on its surface. Many a quaint being was among them, but they affected only our, human imagination, for in the evolutionary struggle we are the only ones who have obtained the advantage of reason.
    Evolution from ape to man
    The animated movie made by Sergey Krivoplyasov and Antropogenez.ru in 2017
    Why don’t apes evolve into humans? • Why don’t apes evolve ...
    Subscribe to our channel: clck.ru/Jnmvo
    Become a Patron: www.patreon.com/bePatron?c=19...
    Сharacters (human ancestors):
    - Proconsul heseloni
    - Ardipithecus ramidus
    - Australopithecus afarensis
    - Homo habilis
    - Homo ergaster
    - Homo heidelbergensis
    The following people took part in the creation of the cartoon:
    - Alexander Sokolov - science consultant, project management;
    - Stanislav Drobyshevskiy - science consultant, screenplay, Russian voiceover.
    - Sergey Krivoplyasov - animation, characters set up, shaders, lighting, characters design, modeling, surrounding modeling, composing, edition, special effects. Optimization and rendering. Screenplay assistance, directing, producing and management. Everything was created and rendered with one computer :)
    3D models by:
    - Oleg Avramenko;
    - Oleg Prosvirnin;
    - Dmitriy Shilov;
    - Vladimir Saenkov;
    - Alexey Troshin.
    Episode 3 and 4 motion capture by Vadim Garelin (Vataga Studio)
    Russian voiceover: MARAKUJA Records;
    English translation by Ilya Mukhanov;
    English voiceover by Josh Bloomberg;
    English voiceover support: Clarus Victoria
    English voice processing: Ivan Pereligin
    Spanish subtitles: Luca ML
    Bulgarian subtitles: Viktoria Tsaryova
    German subtitles: Yurii Erofeev
    Serbian subtitles: Elizabeta Musić
    Norwegian subtitles: Vladislav Panteleev
    Ukranian subtitles: Vladislav Panteleev
    Information Support: Sci-One Channel / @scione
    Technological Support: XXII century web portal 22century.ru/
    Skulls were provided by the State Biological Museum named after K.A. Timiryazev.
    Crownfunding and information support - Dmitriy Puchkov and Studio "Polniy P" oper.ru
    (c) ANTROPOGENEZ.RU
    antropogenez_ru
    / antropogenez
    Contact
    E-mail: g_souris@mail.ru
    Skype: ya-kudzo

Komentáře • 53K

  • @ScientistsAgainstMyths
    @ScientistsAgainstMyths  Před 5 lety +1118

    The animated movie made by Sergey Krivoplyasov and Antropogenez.ru
    Why don’t apes evolve into humans? czcams.com/video/cfqIpr_xWlE/video.html
    Subscribe to our channel: clck.ru/Jnmvo
    Become a patron: www.patreon.com/join/antropogenez_world

    • @heitorsantos7046
      @heitorsantos7046 Před 4 lety +20

      I love hominis

    • @SAMADDAR2021
      @SAMADDAR2021 Před 4 lety +8

      Very helpful !!! Thank you..

    • @frogman1610
      @frogman1610 Před 4 lety +3

      Cool

    • @rajkumarm8440
      @rajkumarm8440 Před 4 lety +15

      In the begining of common era charles darvin formulated the natural selection theory but when he was about to die one man issac met him and said him the real mystery about the holy book bible and he said about jesus and his miracles and when darwin heard this he changed and followed the path of god and died and he cancelled his theory about the monkey to man and believed that god made man and a woman adam and eve and through there generation u and me had been created thank u for your interests

    • @rajkumarm8440
      @rajkumarm8440 Před 4 lety +8

      May the god bless you and keep you &MAKE HIS FACE SHINE ON YOU AMEN

  • @TheNakedasshole
    @TheNakedasshole Před 4 lety +17414

    Thanks to cameraman live from million years ago for the documentary

    • @advancedl2661
      @advancedl2661 Před 3 lety +752

      He didn’t go back it’s animated lmao
      Edit: you guys didnt get my joke ig. My joke was that I didn’t get the joke which is obvious .

    • @thejza9910
      @thejza9910 Před 3 lety +347

      AdvancedL2 nice job not getting the joke

    • @advancedl2661
      @advancedl2661 Před 3 lety +173

      Glizzyjulian On iOS
      Yh because I definitely thought the guy was being serious when he thanked a camera man millions of years ago for recording dinosaurs.

    • @thejza9910
      @thejza9910 Před 3 lety +64

      AdvancedL2 did anyone ask?

    • @advancedl2661
      @advancedl2661 Před 3 lety +198

      Glizzyjulian On iOS
      Alr this is my last response/edit
      this is an open comment section, literally made for public opinions. Nobody like actually needs to ask.
      the whole “didn’t ask” thing was everyone’s response to an argument for like 6 months ago. So unless u actually got a reason to argue, saying “I didn’t ask” means literally nothing.
      Also I’m not defending my “joke” bc it makes no sense now, but when I wrote that my name was “I didn’t get the joke”

  • @ungchheangly3118
    @ungchheangly3118 Před 4 lety +4264

    human long ago: survival mode
    human now: creative mode

    • @christbenitez8797
      @christbenitez8797 Před 4 lety +268

      Hardcore mode*

    • @shlomoshekel
      @shlomoshekel Před 4 lety +33

      @@christbenitez8797 lol

    • @uvwuvw-ol3fg
      @uvwuvw-ol3fg Před 4 lety +44

      This can be said only about small percentage, especially after the agricultural/pastoral revolution leading to ever increasing social stratification.

    • @Synthematix
      @Synthematix Před 4 lety +82

      No, modern humans still have the instinct of the homo ergaster, it is called "fight ot flight response" modern words for it is Anxiety neourosis

    • @uvwuvw-ol3fg
      @uvwuvw-ol3fg Před 4 lety +11

      @@Synthematix Agreed, it has been said that humans and chimpanzees have more pronounced proactive aggression which gets resolved with fight or flight response, while bonobos have more pronounced reactive aggression which gets resolved by sociosexuality.
      Since humans are said to be generalist species then it probably depends on a specific environment and social attutudes (pan troglodytes like proactive political games over status and offspring compared to pan paniscus society based on reactive socially functional same sex bonding and playful group bonding for reconciliation regardless of age). Or human society after the agricultural/pastoral revolution based on competitive possessiveness over private property (marriage, amatonormativity), inheritance, virginity and maximization of birth rates according to antinatalism based on consent. Not sure about Melanesians, Trobrianders, !Kung, Bafia people, Mosuo and all the extinct undocumented egalitarian hunter-gatherer societies with partible paternity and alloparenting.

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 10 měsíci +86

    *"We live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology, in which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology."* - Carl Sagan

    • @Rockhound6165
      @Rockhound6165 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Doesn't get more elitist than that. I bet Sagan couldn't tend to a tomato plant.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@Rockhound6165 *_"WISE MEN SPEAK WHEN THEY HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY, FOOLS SPEAK BECAUSE THEY MUST SAY SOMETHING."_* Plato said that c. 300 BCE. You just confirmed your status as fool.

    • @CJFashi
      @CJFashi Před 6 měsíci +2

      Truly a genius who walked amongst men.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@Rockhound6165 "A wise man speaks when he has something to say. A fool speaks because he has to say something." - Plato (c. 400 BCE). Thanks for proving it is still true. You had best stick with rocks. Thinking is not something you are good at.

    • @jimbojones5136
      @jimbojones5136 Před 2 měsíci

      @@RandallWilkshurrrr durrrr look at me im soooooo smart i quoted Carl Sagan and Plato!!! I’m so much more intelligent than my inferior primate counterparts

  • @kennethraymondmoore
    @kennethraymondmoore Před 6 měsíci +18

    I feel people honestly don't appreciate or understand the vast amounts of time this all took place over. It's really mind-boggling. Generation after generation reproducing over endless time with little changes here and there eventually adding up to whole new species. It's crazy to think about, but totally makes sense.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 6 měsíci +4

      All life on earth is dependent on the DNA molecule that regulates bodily functions and transmits hereditary information to progeny. That is very strong evidence for common ancestry in that there are about 1 million other molecules that could conceivably perform the same function.
      *THE FACT THAT THE DNA MOLECULE IS BOTH HERITABLE AND MUTABLE MAKES EVOLUTION INEVITABLE.*

    • @DavidVonR
      @DavidVonR Před měsícem

      Here's one way to imagine vast amounts of time: Imagine that a meter stick represents 1000 years. 1 year would be a millimeter and 25 years would be an inch. 1 million years would be a kilometer. The age of the Earth would be about the width of the US.

  • @PhlyDaily
    @PhlyDaily Před 4 lety +4702

    6:34 me running from my responsibilities

  • @nepistic__1118
    @nepistic__1118 Před 3 lety +3239

    why is no one talking about how beautiful the animation is.

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 10 měsíci +83

    FUN FACT: All chordates possess a tail and pharyngeal slits at some point in their lives, and humans are no exception. Early on in human development, the embryo has both a tail and pharyngeal slits, both of which are lost during the course of development. Pharyngeal slits are openings in the pharynx of a vertebrate embryo that develop into gill arches in the bony fishes and into the jaws and inner ear in the terrestrial vertebrates. Pharyngeal slits and tails are found in the embryos of all vertebrates because they share as common ancestors the fish in which these structures first evolved.
    Every human embryo starts to develop a tail for a brief period during our embryonic development. At between 4 and 5 weeks of age, the normal human embryo has 10-12 developing tail vertebrae. It is most pronounced at around day 31 to 35 of gestation and then regresses into the four or five fused vertebrae becoming our coccyx.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 10 měsíci +7

      A similar thing happens in the dolphin embryo. Hind limb buds form in early embryos, but just as with the human tail, they are usually resorbed prior to birth. Usually, but not always. On very rare occasions, cetaceans have been found with external hind limbs (flippers).
      One such four finned dolphin with well-developed, symmetrical fins, later named Haruka, was captured by Japanese fishermen in 2006 in the cove at Taiji, Kujirakan province, Japan. (The location made infamous by the documentary "The Cove".) Initially it was one of 108 dolphins rounded up at one time for slaughter. Because of its unusual appendages it was spared and kept as the featured attraction in the aquarium of the Taiji Whale Museum. As with other dolphins at the aquarium it was trained to invert for regular physical examination. It died in 2014 and has been preserved for future study.

    • @user-yg1sh6jm7u
      @user-yg1sh6jm7u Před 5 měsíci +1

      يبدو انك تعرف الكثير عن التطور اتسمح لي ان اسئلك بعض الأسئلة

    • @earth2k66
      @earth2k66 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Human Genome is a book, each chapter describing the description and recipe of a common ancestor.
      From Zygote to birth, an individual completes the full evolution from a single-cell organism to a Human infant.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@earth2k66Sorry, but that is wrong. What you stated is, in essence, the 19th century hypothesis put forth by German biologist Ernst Haeckel; "Ontogeny recapitulates Phylogeny". Despite similarities of early embryos, the hypothesis does not standup to closer examination.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 4 měsíci

      @@user-yg1sh6jm7u Fire away.

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 8 měsíci +7

    Denial is not refutation. There is a reason creationists keep attacking a man who has been dead for 130 years; it's a soft target, so much easier to attack a dead man than evolution itself which comes from the combined work of the millions of scientists in multiple fields of study.

    • @varyolla435
      @varyolla435 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Denial as you say is most commonly seen as = a reaction to what is not understood. Yet as you alluded to one can today avail themselves to information such that the argument of "not knowing" becomes a pitiful excuse as everything is out in the open and easily accessible.
      Therefore "denialism" comes to be emblematic of what is really = _"ideological irrationality."_ People who have hitched their wagons as it were to what are usually dogmatic, static beliefs for which they are unable/willinging to let go - to say nothing of considering other possibilities.
      Such a paradigm becomes little more than = _"willful ignorance."_ They attack via "abstracts" and as you say "soft targets" - which are merely "foils" they use to justify their denialism - because in the end they have no plausible counterpoint. Everything they claim to believe in represents subjective assumption of validity = which is impossible to quantify to others as it is only real for the individual contingent upon their desire to believe it. 🤨

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@varyolla435 Right on.

    • @educationforblind6362
      @educationforblind6362 Před 17 dny

      I believe in evolutionary creationion

    • @educationforblind6362
      @educationforblind6362 Před 17 dny

      ​@@varyolla435Actually adam had parents and he was not the first human, same as eve (he is the ancestor of homo sapiens/neanderthals), and he from earlier human race. Later jews aded Hypotheses and myths about him.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 17 dny +1

      @@educationforblind6362 Nobody gives a shit what you choose to believe. Beliefs exist in the human mind and cannot be distinguished from delusions. TRUTH is determined by EVIDENCE.

  • @abysscreaturekatsu3443
    @abysscreaturekatsu3443 Před 3 lety +2471

    Humans million years ago: Hunts various animals with ease
    Humans now: Scared of flying cockroach
    Edit: There’s a dumb conflict going on in my reply section

  • @willywilly8311
    @willywilly8311 Před 3 lety +3431

    This is the proof, cameramen are immortal

    • @mathias5980
      @mathias5980 Před 3 lety +75

      If apes evolved to humans then how come there is still apes and monkeys in the zoo

    • @rezero3080
      @rezero3080 Před 3 lety +28

      @@mathias5980 hahahahahahah. bruh. 😂😂😂😂.

    • @rezero3080
      @rezero3080 Před 3 lety +16

      @@mathias5980 most people are blind

    • @jarrygarry5316
      @jarrygarry5316 Před 3 lety +28

      Cameraman is God after all

    • @juanjoyaborja.3054
      @juanjoyaborja.3054 Před 3 lety +21

      @@mathias5980 You can’t be serious…

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před rokem +10

    *SOME PEOPLE STILL ASK, "WHY ARE THERE STILL APES (OR MONKEYS)?"*
    It should be obvious that such people lack an understanding of what evolution is and how it works. Apparently someone told such people that humans evolved from apes, and from that, due to their lack of education, they assumed that all apes were supposed to evolve into humans. That is not how evolution works, but creationists have no interest in learning anything other than creation mythology.
    They might just as well have asked "If dogs are descended from wolves, why are there still wolves?" Or even "If Americans came from Europe, why are there still Europeans?" Just as dogs descended from a population of wolves, so too did humans evolve from one particular population of apes.
    What we know is that the first apes evolved in Africa about 25 million years ago from a population of Old World Monkeys. Whereas monkeys run on all four feet across the TOPS of branches, apes evolved the ability to swing, arm over arm, from branch to branch. Evolution works to make each species best suited to their environment. For apes, that environment was the forest and they are well suited for it. At one time there were about 30 different species of apes in those forests.
    Had environmental conditions remained the same, we would still see forests covering the whole African continent. However, conditions did not stay the same; the climate became drier. As a result, forested areas shrank in size and were replaced by grasslands, the African savanna, with just a few scattered trees. The shrinking forests put different ape species in competition with each other and many went extinct.
    Then, about 6 or 7 million years ago, one population of apes split, with some of them opting for life on that open savanna. All apes are capable of walking upright, they are just not comfortable doing so for long periods of time. Recent experiments with trained chimps on a treadmill have shown that for them, walking upright was more efficient in terms of energy expended than quadrupedal walking. Chimps and other apes though must shift their weight from side to side while walking bipedaly.
    That savanna environment favored skeletal changes that placed the knees directly under the center of gravity. by about 4 mya, our ancestral australopithecines had almost the same pelvis, femur, knees and feet as modern humans. That gave them a smooth stride that was efficient for long distance travel. They did however, retain long arms and curved fingers enabling them to climb a tree when danger threatened.
    The apes that remained in a forest environment were under little pressure to change. They became the ancestors of today's chimps and bonobos. Those living in the open were presented challenges not experienced by woodland apes, and that required greater intelligence and cooperation to overcome them. It set their descendants on a different evolutionary trajectory that culminated in us.

    • @Xithin87
      @Xithin87 Před rokem +2

      I had trouble explaining this ! Thanks for the help 😅

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před rokem +1

      @@Xithin87 That's my job. You're welcome.

    • @paul9570
      @paul9570 Před 18 dny

      It really annoys me when people don't take the time to understand evolution and just dismiss it as just a theory, one thing they can't really understand is the amount of time it takes for species to evolve (no one can really appreciate just how long 50 million years are and what can happen to things in that amount of time.. I use the dog wolf analogy sometimes but even then they argue and say man created dogs from cross breading 😊. Trying to explain about common ancestors helps. I just wish they would teach it more in schools.
      The Blind Watchmaker and the Selfish Gene,
      Books by Richard Dawkins are an excellent read.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 17 dny +1

      @@paul9570 As Albert Eistein said, "Anyone can 'know', the point is to _understand._ Problem is, creationists have no desire to understand. They are told that it is 'against their religion' to do so. Many, if not all of those who self identify as , subscribe to some version of this infamous “Statement of Faith” from the creationist website 'Answers in Genesis'. It precludes any serious inquiry:
      _"By definition, no apparent, perceived or claimed evidence in any field, including history and chronology, can be valid if it contradicts the scriptural record. Of primary importance is the fact that evidence is always subject to interpretation by fallible people who do not possess all information."_
      That is not a search for truth. That statement makes it perfectly clear that YECs will not consider anything that conflicts with their preconceived assumptions, so whatever evidence is presented is disregarded. That is the very antithesis of science whose only mandate is to follow evidence wherever it leads. TRUTH is determined by EVIDENCE, not by what anyone says and not by words in an old book. The rules of evidence are this: *If you don't have any...YOU LOSE!*
      There are mountains of evidence from multiple scientific fields of inquiry that all consistently arrive at the same conclusions in support of evolution. Nothing in science is ever considered 'proven'. However, when all evidence points in the same direction and none refutes it, that is as close to absolute certainty as it gets in science.
      A Scientific Theory is an explanation for observed phenomena. That is true of Germ Theory, Atomic Theory, Heliocentric Theory, Theory of Evolution, Theories of Relativity; ALL SCIENTIFIC THEORIES. No Scientific Theory is considered 'proven'. If anyone can provide contrdictory evidence, please write it up and submit it to one of the science journals for peer review and publication. Should you succeed in refuting any scientific theory you would be assured instant fame and a certain A Scientific Theory is an explanation for observed phenomena. That is true of Germ Theory, Atomic Theory, Heliocentric Theory, Theory of Evolution, Theories of Relativity; ALL SCIENTIFIC THEORIES.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 16 dny +2

      @@paul9570 I taught History and Science to advanced placement middle school students who were eager to learn. While I admire teachers, some I talked with revealed that they never took college classes that were not required for getting Teaching Credentials. I saw my task as educating teachers as well as students. When asked how they taught science subjects, they said they simply read ahead in the student textbooks. When I asked about how they taught evolution, some said they presented 'both sides' and let the students decide. I had to wonder if they taught astronomy/astrology that way.

  • @walkergarya
    @walkergarya Před 11 měsíci +18

    You can deny the value of the Theory of Evolution to Biology all you want, but it will gain you as much respect as denying the Spherical Earth.

    • @QuirkedUpAryan
      @QuirkedUpAryan Před měsícem

      Listen weetard your non-white skull can't comprehend anything but whatever the Eternal Kike shills to you. Silence your swarthoid noises.

  • @BlGGESTBROTHER
    @BlGGESTBROTHER Před 4 lety +1220

    What blows my mind is that out of all the generations of hominids born before me stretching back millions of years; I was lucky enough to be born now, in the only time it's been possible to know about our hominid ancestors! *hits bong again*

    • @williamkeltner5119
      @williamkeltner5119 Před 4 lety +37

      Some of these 'ancestors' hang around the city bus transfer plaza I use. I guess that's where they got the models.

    • @kaks14
      @kaks14 Před 4 lety +5

      even our dinosaur ancestors

    • @versedxxx8805
      @versedxxx8805 Před 4 lety +1

      What if carnation is real

    • @BlGGESTBROTHER
      @BlGGESTBROTHER Před 4 lety +20

      @@versedxxx8805 They are real. I have some in my garden.

    • @challaboru5107
      @challaboru5107 Před 4 lety

      @@kaks14 hahaha

  • @l8ralt3sh22
    @l8ralt3sh22 Před 2 lety +1105

    " Man was now armed "
    sounds more of a threat than a evolutionary level-up

    • @juanjoyaborja.3054
      @juanjoyaborja.3054 Před 2 lety +19

      Tier zoo reference?

    • @brah3565
      @brah3565 Před 2 lety +17

      @bleh fun fact:human are design to be omnivore

    • @brah3565
      @brah3565 Před 2 lety +6

      @bleh eating less meat won't help the planet idiot

    • @l8ralt3sh22
      @l8ralt3sh22 Před 2 lety

      fuck is going on
      i just typed this comment because i thought its funny
      i started a war without even knowing it

    • @brah3565
      @brah3565 Před 2 lety +2

      @bleh imagine being that vegan teacher fan

  • @CJFashi
    @CJFashi Před 10 měsíci +14

    The most powerful and epic story of all - is truth. Far more fascinating than any creation myth.

    • @Allaboutjesus237
      @Allaboutjesus237 Před 4 měsíci

      No sir...evolution is a myth. Creation is a true story. We are all made in the image of the Living God. Not in the image of an ape. Do not let satan blind your eyes 😢

    • @CJFashi
      @CJFashi Před 4 měsíci

      @@Allaboutjesus237 ignorant idiot wants to talk about myths. Lol, lmao even.

    • @happilysecular1833
      @happilysecular1833 Před 4 měsíci

      @@Allaboutjesus237 That’s like saying sexual reproduction is a myth and babies coming from storks is a true story.

    • @Pieprzonypedal
      @Pieprzonypedal Před 3 měsíci

      @@Allaboutjesus237nobody wants to hear your bullshit about god

    • @Pieprzonypedal
      @Pieprzonypedal Před 3 měsíci

      @@Allaboutjesus237shut up

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 6 měsíci +7

    *HOW EVOLUTION WORKS* It is helpful to understand that evolution is a molecular process. The random mutations that naturally occur during cell division and replication (mitosis and meiosis) are the raw material for the genetic variation we see in every population of organisms. Mutations are ongoing and continuous for every living species. Mutations are essential to evolution; they are the raw material of genetic variation. Without mutation, evolution could not occur. WITH mutations, evolution is inevitable.
    [NOTE: My original essay had links to applicable illustrations and scientific studies, but CZcams keeps deleting it. My apologies for their absence here.]
    Those genetic variants are subjected to a selection process that is performed by whatever environment the organisms find themselves. In this respect, evolution is an ongoing, continuous set of natural experiments. Those that work get perpetuated, those that don't, perish. It is as if the environment acted as an umpire who says "There are good mutations and there are bad mutations and there are neutral mutations, but they ain't nuthin' until I (the environment) calls 'em." That is Natural Selection. Neutral mutations just go along for the ride producing neither immediate benefit nor harm (Genetic Drift).
    The result of those selection processes is organisms best suited for their current environment. Should that environment change, it would put the population under stress. If the population gene pool has sufficient genetic variation it increases the likelihood that at least some offspring should be able to survive and perpetuate the species (albeit one of slightly different genetic makeup).
    What everyone should understand is that genetic changes do not occur because of some 'need'. The mutations are RANDOM and get selected if they are USEFUL. That is a process called Natural Selection and it is anything BUT random.
    Let's take the example of the Panda. Bears in general are omnivores, eating plant matter, but with a marked preference for meat when available. The preferred food of the Panda however, is bamboo leaves, which have such low nutritional value that they must eat almost continuously. The Panda would certainly be able to extract more nutrition with a four chambered stomach (as in ungulates and whales) or something akin to a cecal valve that would slow the passage of food, but it has neither in its genetic toolbox. In feeding themselves, pandas are continuously stripping bamboo leaves from their stalks, a process that could be facilitated if they had a grasping thumb.
    Bears however do not have thumbs, nor do they have genes for them in their genetic toolbox. Nor do new features simply spring into existence. However, if a slightly altered body component provides some benefit, natural selection will perpetuate it. Evolution is descent with modification and results in incremental alterations to what is already there.
    As an analogy, imagine a robot gardener dragging a hose around various obstacles it encounters in a garden until it can go no further. Now an intelligent gardener could simply retrace his steps and take a different path, avoiding those obstacles. The robot gardener (evolution) is not an intelligent force and cannot do that. With a limited tool kit, it can only (figuratively) add more hose to get the job done.
    While a thumb would be quite useful to a panda for stripping leaves, evolution cannot rewind to produce one. Instead, it has taken "a piece of hose' (a wrist bone) and enlarged it to act as a stand in for a thumb. That is not an elegant solution and not a perfect one, but it gets the job done. Evolution is does not produce perfect solutions, but tweaks here and there to get the job done". THAT is how evolution operates. The panda’s "thumb", developed over thousands of generations of holding things, is clearly an enlarged bone (the “radial sesamoid”) in the the paw of a bear.
    Based in part on the fact that no tetrapods, (terrestrial vertebrates) exist in the fossil record prior to about 370 million years ago, the Theory of Evolution would predict that tetrapods evolved from fish. If that were the case, there should have existed at one time a fish with characteristics of both fish and tetrapods. In other words a Transitional Species. Until about 2005, there was only scattered evidence for such a creature. There were however, a class of fish called Sarcopterygians or Lobe Finned Fishes, that dominated Devonian seas. What characterized those lobe finned fishes was that those fins were supported by external bones and muscles. Those bones, a single bone, connected to two bones connected to smaller bones, are homologous to the limb bones of all tetrapods, including humans. Most Sarcopterygian Fishes have long been extinct, but they are survived today by two species of coelacanth and six species of lungfish.
    Still, what was missing was a fossil showing characteristics of fish AND tetrapods. When Neil Shubin and his team decided to search for a fossil that filled the gap between the Lobe Finned Fishes that dominated Devonian Seas and the earliest tetrapod fossils represented by Ichthyostega and Acanthostega dated about 370 mya. Since those fossils were found in geologic deposits indicating a freshwater environment and if the Theory of Evolution is correct in its hypothesis that tetrapods evolved from fish, then transitional fossils should be found in similar deposits somewhat older in age. The problem was that geologic deposits of that age are exposed at few places on the earth's surface.
    Fortunately, a great deal of geologic exploration has been done throughout the world, financed often times by oil and mining interests. They selected an area in the Canadian Arctic, Ellesmere Island, as having the greatest likelihood of success. It took them 4 expeditions over 4 years, searching during the short summers of that hostile environment but finally succeeded in 2004, returning with 9 specimens of the fish they named Tiktaalik (an Inuit word meaning large freshwater fish).
    It was exactly what one would expect a transitional fish-tetrapod to look like and was found in deposits dated 375 mya. If this was not the direct ancestor of tetrapods, it was something very much like it.This is a great example of using evolutionary theory as a predictive tool.
    Btw, biointeractive(dot)org is a great source of information for all of science. If anyone has an interest in expanding their knowledge of science they should use it.
    The genetic variation within a population is referred to as a gene pool. Organisms can move freely within that population breeding with each other, perpetuating any new mutations that work and eliminating those that are less than optimal. Each offspring will most resemble its parents, yet will vary slightly genetically because of unique mutations acquired during meiosis. Thus the genetic makeup of a population will change ever so slightly with each successive generation.
    Populations are not stable, they expand and contract with changing conditions. So long as there is sufficient genetic variation within a population there will be some members capable of surviving those conditions and perpetuating the species. The alternative is extinction.
    When populations expand and migrate to new territories, some portions of it will become genetically isolated from each other and no longer share a common gene pool. In such cases, each such sub population will carry a subset of the parent population genome, but subsequent mutations will be unique to each new population (the genotype) that will come to differentiate that population from others (Genetic Drift).
    To the extent that such populations encounter differing environmental conditions, that environment will exert different evolutionary pressures on that population. New mutations will have a much greater chance of coming to dominance within a smaller population than they would in the larger parent population where they would be one among the many. Over thousands of generations genetic differences accumulate in the different gene pools making interbreeding ever more difficult until at some point speciation can be said to have occurred. Because speciation is a process, rather than an event, it would be no more possible to pinpoint where speciation occurred than to identify where on the color spectrum orange becomes red.

    • @YoItsmike171
      @YoItsmike171 Před 5 měsíci

      God created everything how dare you reject God

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@YoItsmike171 GOD WAS A TREMENDOUS INVENTION AND A GREAT BENEFIT TO MANKIND. Before man created God, they felt really stupid. Confronted with any question, all they could say was "Gee, I don't know" and no matter how hard they thought, they couldn't think of a better answer.
      Then someone came up with the brilliant idea of God. It was wonderful, it obviated the need to think about anything. The answer could always be "Gee, I don't know, it must be God." Problem solved. The "God concept" alleviated the need to think about mundane things and they could concentrate on serious questions, like "How many bibles can we sell?" There was no incentive for human intellect to advance beyond that of ancient goat herders. Religions need to perpetuate ignorance in order to preserve their influence.
      It is quite likely that the "god concept" originated with Homo erectus as an explanation for thunder.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 5 měsíci +1

      *FACTS ABOUT THE BIBLE* People reading the bible should realize that every single supposed incident took place within an extremely small radius of the middle east. According to Barnes' Notes on the Bible, the direct distance of Babylon from Jerusalem is about 520 miles (as the crow flies); the more circuitous route used by caravans or armies went via Carchemish and the Orontes valley, is about 900 miles. The shorter route was through the Syrian Desert and few survived that trip.
      Virtually every other event in the bible took place in a much smaller radius of Jerusalem, the capitol of the Kingdom of Judah. The Judahites (the original Jews), were genetically identical to Canaanites, their alphabet and language both derived from Canaanite precursors, as was their religion. Genetically, the 'Israelites' were Canaanites, as were the Edomites, Ammonites, Phoenecians and other peoples of the Levant. The Philistines however, were foreign invaders that took over 5 coastal cities. The "Israelites" were pastoral Canaanites that left coastal areas for the hill country and established a separate identity.
      According to Bible Odyssey, Egypt is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible almost seven hundred times, and it is referred to another 25 times in the New Testament, making it the most frequently mentioned place name outside Canaan in the Bible. Egypt during biblical times, was already an ancient civilization and the pyramids were thousands of years old.
      For all the times Egypt is mentioned in the bible, never once was there any reference either the pyramids or the Great Sphinx, most likely because those who wrote the bible were never there.
      For instance, there is no mention in any Egyptian writing of any of the biblical patriarches who supposedly vistited there; not Abraham and Sarah; not of Joseph who supposedly attained high rank in Pharaoh's court; nor any mention of his supposed progeny, the Israelites, that supposedly spent 400 years in slavery there. Not once is there any mention of a man named Moses, nor anyone like him. According to the bible, Moses also supposedly had high rank in a later pharaoh's court yet there is no mention of him in Egyptian records. According to the bible, Moses was saved as an infant by his mother floating him down the Nile in a reed boat.
      That story is virtually identical to the that of Sargon II (aka 'Sargon the Great'), a real person, known to history as ruler of the Neo Assyrian Empire who in 721 BCE defeated and destroyed the ancient Kingdom of Israel, making it the Assyrian province Samaria. The legend of Sargon II as a baby being saved by his mother by floating him in a reed boat down the Euphrates River was well known throughout Mesopotamia. It would have also been known by the Judean peoples, including the priests and scribes who were writing the Tanakh during the Babylonian Exile of the those peoples, 597 BCE to 538 BCE . Almost 700 years later, the Hebrew Tanakh was adopted by Christianity as the "Old Testament".
      Also absent from Egyptian records is any mention of deaths of all first born children in Egypt, something that would have been noted everywhere in Egypt. Nor any mention of sticks turning into snakes. No mention or even evidence of a significant loss of population and the economic impact it would have had, and no mention of the loss of a pharaoh, let alone loss of an army with 500 chariots that would have weakened Egypt militarily for decades to come.
      TRUTH is determined by EVIDENCE, not by what anyone says and not by words in an old book. The rules of evidence are this: *If you don't have any...YOU LOSE!*
      There are however, unscrupulous people, motivated by religious fervor, that would go so far as to manufacture bogus evidence they hope would support a story they really wish to be true. Such a person was Ron Wyatt, a con man whose only legitimate occupation was as nurse-anesthetist in a hospital in Madison, Tennessee. When he found he could make money 'gaslighting' religious fanatics his financial situation improved immensely. This 'Indiana Jones wannabe' has no archeological qualifications whatsoever, yet has claimed almost 100 Bible-related discoveries. He has been criticized by scientists, historians, biblical scholars, as well as some creationists. He ranks among the great con artists who find fertile ground among people who have a compulsive need to believe.
      Now there are many people who have been taught since childhood that the bible is the absolute word of god, that everything in it is the literal truth and if they don't believe it, they will burn in Hell forever and ever, because god loves you. You were told that by the people who raised you, fed you, cared for you and probably loved you. They told you that, because that is what THEIR parents told THEM. THAT is indoctrination.
      A belief is an idea that neither seeks nor requires verifiable evidence. Beliefs exist in the human mind. Those who seek answers based on opinions or beliefs are most likely to fall prey to self deception and seek confirmation of their bias. Truth is determined by EVIDENCE, not by what anyone says and not by words in some old book.

  • @wo0sh99
    @wo0sh99 Před 3 lety +834

    F for that one ancestor who killed by the bear

    • @kool-aidan
      @kool-aidan Před 3 lety +7

      @Bo Spoonson wait but how did those apes evolve but our "cousins" didn't?

    • @calvindike8402
      @calvindike8402 Před 3 lety +1

      ​@Bo Spoonson Nope. I aint related to all creature in the whole world. No animal has a black man dna! Maybe your race is related to canines but we're not

    • @Rebelconformist82
      @Rebelconformist82 Před 3 lety +57

      @@calvindike8402 dude, you're dna is almost the same as any other person on earth you doughnut

    • @xmimagma4630
      @xmimagma4630 Před 3 lety +20

      @@Rebelconformist82 that is one rare insult

    • @Rebelconformist82
      @Rebelconformist82 Před 3 lety +21

      @@xmimagma4630 yeah, I can safely say I've never used it before in my life. lol

  • @SCP-xv4lk
    @SCP-xv4lk Před 3 lety +864

    The cameraman needs to get paid more ngl.

    • @esrauzuner3757
      @esrauzuner3757 Před 3 lety +32

      such a hard work to keep filming on and on for all those years 🙏🙏🙏

    • @SCP-xv4lk
      @SCP-xv4lk Před 3 lety +8

      @@chazzywaz I agree.

    • @SCP-xv4lk
      @SCP-xv4lk Před 3 lety +4

      @@esrauzuner3757 🙏🙏🙏

    • @herobrine3306
      @herobrine3306 Před 3 lety +1

      I might get the joke but its still animated

    • @Liffey_Brown
      @Liffey_Brown Před 3 lety +5

      I heard he used TVA portals

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 11 měsíci +6

    The difference between faith and insanity is that insanity is the ability to hold firmly to a conclusion that is incompatible with the evidence, whereas faith is the ability to hold firmly to a conclusion that is incompatible with the evidence.

    • @amosamwig8394
      @amosamwig8394 Před 5 měsíci

      in science you learn not to say we have proof its not even observed evolution lol
      inductive reasonings for pokemons

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 5 měsíci

      @@amosamwig8394 Thanks for once again demonstrating your abysmal ignorance of anything related to science. Get a brain.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 5 měsíci

      @@amosamwig8394 Meh.

    • @ishros
      @ishros Před měsícem +1

      @@amosamwig8394everyone observes evolution. You are evolving.

    • @ishros
      @ishros Před měsícem +1

      Thank you for your work Randall

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 9 měsíci +9

    *FACT: No one is born with a language or religion.* A developing child is capable of learning any language, just as it is capable of learning any religion. The ability of a child to learn another language diminishes with age, as also happens with patterns of thought. As Albert Einstein noted "What passes for common sense is the collection of prejudices we acquire by age 18". He also said; "Few people are capable of expressing with equanimity opinions which differ from the prejudices of their social environment. Most people are even incapable of forming such opinions."
    In essence a child is imprinted by the family and society into which it is born. It takes concentrated effort to alter those learned behaviors and few are capable of doing so. Being confronted by new information that conflicts with those learned behaviors will likely result in the discomfort known as 'cognitive dissonance'. Ideas and attitudes absorbed by a child's mind were not reasoned there, and in most cases, cannot be reasoned out of them.
    There is no evidence for ANY creation event. NONE, ZIP. NADA. It does not exist because there was no 'creator'. What anyone chooses to believe exists in their mind and cannot be distinguished from delusion. There are more than 3000 creation stories; they all originated in the imaginations of primitive peoples. They exist today as culturally sanctioned superstitions.

    • @varyolla435
      @varyolla435 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Yes. Children are born lacking a "preference" for sound creation if you will. They will "imprint" as you noted onto sounds they are exposed to in their environment - specifically certain languages those around them. This by the way is the concept behind certain baby videos which use visual imagery to keep the infant's attention as it is exposed to different languages being articulated.
      Each language representing certain sounds inherent to that language has been shown to stimulate specific areas of the brain. So exposing the infant at an early age to "complex sounds" results in more "global stimulation" within their brains. In other words a child exposed to say English will after some months imprint upon that language and the sounds its pronunciation is based upon. Consequently its' brain will focus upon those areas impacted by that sound - to the potential detriment of other areas - as those areas are the ones being mostly used.
      So the concept behind the science is to expose the infant to different languages - read a variety of complex sounds - which results in a more active brain = hopefully stimulating better intelligence as it grows. If you eat the same food day after day then that is all your taste buds know. If you however vary your diet you will come to develop a taste for other things. The more you use your brain as opposed to lapsing into "a rut" = the greater your potential thinking skills can be.

  • @us8374
    @us8374 Před 3 lety +869

    "Reject humanity"
    "Return to Monke"

    • @breezyg7652
      @breezyg7652 Před 3 lety +18

      I have ascended beyond you filthy mortals for I am now monke

    • @breezyg7652
      @breezyg7652 Před 3 lety +8

      @Bo Spoonson the way of monke has allowed me to answer the question: is water wet?
      The answer is ......... yes’nt

    • @zarugaming5511
      @zarugaming5511 Před 3 lety +18

      Atheists be like: Grandpa! 😍

    • @zarugaming5511
      @zarugaming5511 Před 3 lety +1

      @Bo Spoonson cap

    • @jomarjose3298
      @jomarjose3298 Před 3 lety +1

      Hahahh why do you want to reject human?

  • @Cheezy_Bunz
    @Cheezy_Bunz Před 3 lety +2951

    Monke no wanted leave tree. Monke leave tree. Sad monke. Now human.

  • @rebeccataylor4809
    @rebeccataylor4809 Před rokem +6

    It's really not that long ago in geological terms that we became us and historical humans are less than the blink of an eye and yet the development has been incredible.

    • @varyolla435
      @varyolla435 Před rokem

      Punctuated equilibrium can do that in matters of evolution. When a grouping finds itself in a favorable environment where there is not a lot of competition it favors new adaptation occurring as well as the passing on of those new traits. If however you have a stable environment with loads of others you tend to see "more of the same" as the occasional new adaptation has more competition before it can be passed on.
      Also it is important to take physiology into account. More than anything else probably it was the harnessing of fire which amplified our evolution. Think herbivores which constitute most mammalian species. They spend most of their waking time = eating. Because they consume plant matter which is not highly nutritious they derive little value from it necessitating large quantities to survive.
      We however cook our food. That breaks down the molecular structure of the food allowing us to absorb more nutrients = which gives our bodies more energy and facilitates a higher level of metabolic functioning. So harnessing fire and cooking our food as well as our eating a diverse diet meant our brain functioning could grow and our bodies could also accommodate additional evolution. This is why coincidentally people who suffer from chronic malnutrition can suffer cognitive and physiological impairments as their bodies are not getting enough energy/nutrition to grow and function properly.

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 11 dny +3

    We live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology, in which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology. - Carl Sagan
    Creationists: "What are science and technology?"

  • @milesclyde8109
    @milesclyde8109 Před 3 lety +396

    My little brother walked in during the half human half monkey part and asked if I was watching monkey porn
    Good times

  • @monke6868
    @monke6868 Před 3 lety +1829

    Back in my day's.....

    • @xx_stqrxappie_xx9740
      @xx_stqrxappie_xx9740 Před 3 lety +32

      Have you been friends with gorillas and orangutans? (I know ur gonna say no)

    • @udbhav_arya
      @udbhav_arya Před 3 lety +62

      " Reject Humanity. Return to Monke. " 🤝🏽

    • @hhfbko
      @hhfbko Před 3 lety +69

      Grandpa??!!

    • @rameshp6679
      @rameshp6679 Před 3 lety +11

      @@hhfbko 😂

    • @monke6868
      @monke6868 Před 3 lety +14

      @@xx_stqrxappie_xx9740 What question it's that of course yes but not with gorillas.....-___- don't ask why

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před rokem +6

    *WHAT DARWIN KNEW* In 1830, at age 21, Charles Darwin graduated Cambridge University with a degree in theology. Had it not been for one of his theology professors, Reverend Professor John Stevens Henslow who was also a biologist, Darwin would surely have faded into obscurity as an ordinary Anglican (Church of England) minister.
    At that time, theology professors were also expected to teach other subjects and young Charles Darwin eagerly sought out such teachers, one of which was Henslow. In his eagerness to learn about the natural world, Darwin would often question his tutor between classes. This was noted so often that Darwin became known as "The man who walks with Henslow". Even after graduation, Henslow encouraged his young protege to study geology with Reverend Professor Adam Sedgwick.
    It was Henslow to whom the position of ship's naturalist was first offered by Captain Robert FitzRoy of the HMS Beagle. At the time, FitzRoy and the Beagle were preparing for an extended voyage of discovery, charting the waters of South America. Henslow declined that offer due to his wife's opposition, but recommended his young student in his stead. Darwin's social status also made him a suitable traveling companion for a ship's captain who is, for reasons of discipline, denied familiarity with his crew.
    Despite young Darwin's fascination with the natural world he was not yet a scientist. During the voyage however, Darwin was shipping fossils and plant and animal specimens back to Henslow and others who eagerly awaited them. He learned much in the process due to his powers of observation. He published his account of the expedition as 'The Voyage of the Beagle'. Two years later he was nominated and elected a member (Fellow) of the British "Royal Society", which conferred upon him the right to use the letters FRS (Fellow of the Royal Society) as part of his name.* At that point, Charles Darwin was a recognized scientist.
    Darwin's knowledge of geology had served him well during the voyage, during which he furthered that knowledge by reading Charles Lyell's 'Principles of Geology'. Lyell is famous for the principle of "Uniformitarianism"; that the earth has been altered by physical, chemical, and biological processes that are uniform through time. Darwin himself later authored books on geology, resulting in his being elected a Fellow (member) of the Royal geographical Society (FRGS), permitting his use of those letters in his name. Those books:
    The Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs (1842.
    Geological Observations on the Volcanic Islands (1844),
    Geological observations on the volcanic islands and parts of South America visited during the voyage of H.M.S. Beagle (1877)
    Darwin's curiosity and search for knowledge lead him to do research and write books on such diverse subjects as barnacles, orchids, earthworms, carnivorous plants, et al, In total 19 books, and thousands of letters to family and colleagues, all available on-line.
    His seminal work of course was his "On the Origin of species by Means of Natural Selection" published in 1859 when he was 50. It was the culmination of almost 30 years of work.
    That was followed 12 years later by "The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex" which reignited a firestorm of protests from fundamentalist creationists.
    By any measure, the life of Charles Robert Darwin FRS FRGS FLS FZS was one of great accomplishment.He was honored in life by those fellowships, not only the Royal Society and Royal geographical Society, but also the Linnaean Society and Zoological Society.
    Today there are those who fear his revelations weaken religious belief, and so will attempt to vilify him with slander and lies at any opportunity. Of what value is such a religion?
    *The Royal Society of the U.K, is, like the U.S. National Academy of Sciences that was patterned after it, an organization of the top scientific minds of the nation. Fellowship is by invitation only; new members are nominated and voted upon by current members. Those so chosen are entitled to use the letters FRS. (Fellow of the Royal Society) as part of their name. Charles Darwin was one of those so honored.
    To be continued.

  • @justsomeguywholosthismusta8495
    @justsomeguywholosthismusta8495 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I now believe that my dad did in fact crossed jungles and saharas just to go to school. I'm honestly suprised to see him here

  • @shauryasuman9557
    @shauryasuman9557 Před 3 lety +488

    Animals : *kills human*
    Ancestors of early human : makes sharp stick
    Animals : "so thats when my time was up and i was told to leave"

  • @Squicx
    @Squicx Před 3 lety +972

    Knowing they roamed an empty earth where there’s now cities and houses musta been surreal

    • @crypto2633
      @crypto2633 Před 3 lety +38

      Maybe because it is surreal when you actually think about it

    • @Squicx
      @Squicx Před 3 lety +100

      @@crypto2633 every day is an existential crisis

    • @jacobrangel2602
      @jacobrangel2602 Před 3 lety +65

      I always think the same. Like just imagine running around haveing the time of your life and a fucking 19 foot spider swallows you whole

    • @egehulthep7686
      @egehulthep7686 Před 3 lety

      @@lawrencehile9902 no.

    • @egehulthep7686
      @egehulthep7686 Před 3 lety

      @@lawrencehile9902 No.

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 3 měsíci +6

    *EVOLUTION is a BIOLOGICAL PROCESS, NOT AN EVENT.* Evolution proceeds by incremental modification of existing structures. That is what we see, for instance, in the evolution of the heart, from simple muscular contraction of a blood vessel, to the two chambered heart of fish that is basically a thickening of a section of the circulatory system. Higher order vertebrates, like amphibians and reptiles, evolved a 3 chamber heart with two atria(inflow) and one ventricle (out flow). Warm blooded animals, birds and mammals, required the greater oxygenation provided by a 4 chamber heart.
    Our brain evolved in a similar manner; it did not just "pop into existence".

    • @EnvyBlu
      @EnvyBlu Před 2 měsíci

      Nobody said it just popped into existence. Obviously there are dna, genealogical, and environmental changes that caused changes in organs to create Homo sapiens we are today. Evolution IS that long process of changes 🤦🏻‍♀️ Nobody claimed evolution was a quick, one-time occurrence 🙄

  • @MayLNg
    @MayLNg Před rokem +23

    Parent were really worried when their 4 year old son, Bobby never spoke a word. Then on one day at breakfast, all of a sudden Bobby began to shout "This food is a piece of sh**t" The parents hogged Bobby and gave thanks to god for the miracle. After everyone calmed down, the father turned to Bobby and asked: "Son how come that you never spoke before?" Bobby replies "Well up till now, breakfast was OK".

    • @FawnTheCreator
      @FawnTheCreator Před 3 měsíci

      Ok? How does this relate to this video?
      I mean I'm not complaining, I have seen some brainrot in the comments of evolution topic videos.

    • @MayLNg
      @MayLNg Před 3 měsíci

      @@FawnTheCreator It does not, but was only a joke.

    • @RandomChannel982
      @RandomChannel982 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@MayLNgMake a joke to the related video

    • @MayLNg
      @MayLNg Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@RandomChannel982
      A young earth creationist is talking to his congregation...
      "...and we are clearly intelligently designed!" he yells. "Just the eye itself is so incredibly complex, it could have only be designed by an all powerful Creator."
      The congregation cheers.
      "Now please be seated, brothers and sisters. Let the sermon begin." he says, as he puts on his glasses to read from the Bible.

  • @user-jw2hq5yj4d
    @user-jw2hq5yj4d Před 3 lety +908

    Imagine million of years later they making video how humans todays looked like

    • @juanjoyaborja.3054
      @juanjoyaborja.3054 Před 3 lety +68

      That would actually be possible

    • @archive2500
      @archive2500 Před 3 lety +86

      I am just hoping that in the future, there would be no racism, homophobia, hypocrites, irrational beliefs, anymore, and various diverse people and different expressions exist even if I am already dead.

    • @bubbabruh6309
      @bubbabruh6309 Před 3 lety +72

      There’d be no need. They’d have pictures of us.

    • @Chinedumije
      @Chinedumije Před 3 lety +6

      And that is true

    • @senju2024
      @senju2024 Před 3 lety +17

      that is like saying...what will be coolest killing spear look like in a million years from now from a caveman perspective. I promise you we will not be making videos a million years from now.

  • @ynwedy
    @ynwedy Před 3 lety +837

    wish i had a time machine so i could know wtf happened back then

    • @jamesanthony5681
      @jamesanthony5681 Před 3 lety +107

      They're on sale at Costco, so better hurry.

    • @joemama5606
      @joemama5606 Před 3 lety +18

      The day consists of Waking up when light out(since they didnt know about time they only knew that dark means sleep liggt means hunt) go out and hunt animals(took them about 3-9 hours) than bringing the food back and cooking it thats basically what they did

    • @honeybadger469
      @honeybadger469 Před 3 lety +31

      I agree with you the world is so mysterious it always make us curious!!! Most of the scientific explanation are just hypothetical and based on what they observe around but no clear evidences!!! If the human came from apes!!! Why the monkeys nowadays doesn't evolve? They're still a monkey!!! And if you guys say that those monkeys like Australopithecus, homo erectus, and etc: evolves to human being!!! But what's the origination too of those monkeys? Where did they came from? And how it diversified into different races?

    • @jamesanthony5681
      @jamesanthony5681 Před 3 lety +12

      @@honeybadger469 The evidence is in the DNA and how these animals - birds, giraffes, snakes etc. - have adapted to their environments.
      How do you know monkeys are NOT EVOLVING into something akin to humans, after all they've come from the same evolutionary branch? No one knows. Evolution is not quiescent. But then again why should they evolve into humans? They've stayed pretty much a monkey over the millennia, albeit with certain adaptations. They found their niche, i.e, jungle/rainforests, and their environment didn't demand that they become anything more than a monkey, nor did they have a desire to step outside that environment, unlike man.
      What's the origin of monkeys? Man and chimp shared a common ancestor about 6 million years ago, at which point there was a divergence in the evolutionary branch. The origin of all mammals come from those small ground dwelling animals that existed at the time of the dinosaurs. When that meteorite hit the earth some 66 million years ago and wiped out the dinosaurs as well as the majority of animal species on earth, those ground dwelling animals began their ascent to become the dominant species on earth.

    • @honeybadger469
      @honeybadger469 Před 3 lety +9

      @@jamesanthony5681 @James Anthony 😂😂😂😂oh really? They just jumped into this conclusions only on their own analytical observations in the environment!!! But these are still questionable: the question is where did the man and chimp that shared common ancestors came from? What's the origin of these creatures? Also the animals that dwelling on small ground? They must also have an origin! What is this? Did they just grow like a plant? 😂😂and aside from that how did they know that? Are they already alive that time? And take note they know the exact year 6 million years ago!!!

  • @Littlegopher
    @Littlegopher Před 11 měsíci +5

    2:09 got me actin up for some reason 😂

    • @2lowfatmilk606
      @2lowfatmilk606 Před 11 měsíci +2

      You are without a doubt the most down bad person on the planet 💀

    • @SCOP_
      @SCOP_ Před 9 měsíci +4

      Nah bro you down bad

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 10 měsíci +6

    THE FOLLOWING STATEMENTS ARE WHAT REAL SCIENTISTS SAY.
    The creationist answer: "Nuh-uh", "Nuh-uh", "Nuh-uh", ad nauseum
    They think it is a really powerful argument.

  • @korosuke2195
    @korosuke2195 Před 2 lety +1691

    It's amazing that the skulls remain in the soil for millions of years for us to do such detailed scientific researches on. Without them, we never knew what they looked like or how they evolved. Fossils really are precious legacy of our ancestors.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 2 lety +85

      Keep in mind that the conditions for preservation of the remains of plants and animals are rare and depend on the geologic processes of erosion and deposition. To be preserved as a fossil, the remains of an animal must be covered over, (deposition) soon after death; otherwise scavengers, bacteria, fungi and UV light will reduce them to dust. They can remain in that preserved state so long as they remain in subsurface deposits. Erosion can expose them and once again they will be acted upon by the destructive forces of nature. Some will be the consistency of chalk. They will become known to science only if a paleontologist or other knowledgeable person happens by and recognizes them for want they are.
      Very seldom are fossils preserved anywhere near intact as were fossils of Archeopteryx. Those fossils were preserved in exquisite detail because they fell into oxygen depleted lagoons and were slowly covered with fine silt. That silt formed layers that hardened into lithographic limestone, a dense fine grained sedimentary rock forming thin layers that separate easily to form a very smooth surface. It was for that reason that this form of limestone was used for a printing process called lithography.
      Those layers could often be opened like a book exposing a fossil and its mirror image, referred to a 'slab' and 'counter slab'. The name Archeopteryx lithographica, originally assigned to a single feather and so named due to being discovered in such deposits.The first body fossil was discovered in Germany in 1861 and secured for the British Museum by the famous anatomist Sir Richard Owen, now known as the 'London Specimen'. A later (1881), more complete fossil, now referred to as the 'Berlin Specimen' had the head with teeth and a snout rather than a beak. To date, there have been a total of 12 archaeopteryx fossils discovered.

    • @SlurryMadA
      @SlurryMadA Před 2 lety +21

      and every single such relic that gets destroyed is a loss of information that we can never learn

    • @404epnf7
      @404epnf7 Před 2 lety +31

      @@RandallWilks I tried to read your comment, but got exhausted! Why don't you write briefly? That would be useful.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 2 lety +28

      @@404epnf7 You apparently suffer from dyslexia. How sad. I understand treatment is available. Have you sought help? ;-)

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 2 lety +13

      @@404epnf7 Bwahahahahahaha!!!! Wow. I had no idea dyslexics were so sensitive about their condition. It seems you also have anger issues and fortunately for you, there is treatment is available for that.

  • @ka_trippin
    @ka_trippin Před 4 lety +1443

    Humans billions of years ago: killing elephants with ease
    Humans now: *scared of barking dog*

    • @jasongaming3899
      @jasongaming3899 Před 4 lety +16

      Bruh lol yeah

    • @ka_trippin
      @ka_trippin Před 4 lety +22

      Croner God r/wooooosh it’s a fucking joke you don’t have to ruin it with your smart ass

    • @myrinsk
      @myrinsk Před 4 lety +2

      Elijah Mathews Henry elephants can tusk you or stomp you

    • @DaikhanYT
      @DaikhanYT Před 4 lety +6

      you mean scared of a little rat

    • @Golden-Boy-
      @Golden-Boy- Před 4 lety +15

      im not scared wen i have my spear with me :P

  • @happilysecular2323
    @happilysecular2323 Před 11 měsíci +9

    Questions creatards can never answer:
    Why do endogenous retroviruses and syncityn exist? Why do antibiotics need to kept up do date with micro organisms if they don’t evolve? How do you explain ring species? Where can I find a single example of a non-transitional fossil? Why does DNA show that some species are more distantly related than others? Why have there been three new variations of American Goatsbeard flowers if macro evolution doesn’t happen? Why do you pretend that you’re qualified to separate micro evolution from macro evolution when you can’t even tell the difference between evolution, abiogenesis and atheism? Why do we have vomeronasal organs despite not using pheromones? Where did we get chromosome 2 and cytochrome B from? Why do we have pseudogenes, appendixes, wisdom teeth, Plica semilunaris and Nictitating membranes? Why are there stars farther than millions of lightyears away if the earth is only 6,000 years old? Why do tree rings say the earth is older than 6,000 years old? Why were stone tools older than 790,000 years found in Gesher Benot Ya'akov? Why were stone tools older than 400,000 years found at the Revadim Quarry in Israel? When has a creatard used electron spin resonance and thermoluminescence to prove the earth is only 6,000 years old? What is the flat earth method for predicting an eclipse? Where can I find a map of your space frisbee that makes geometrically accurate flight patterns? What is the flerfer explanation for the phases of the moon? Why is there continental distribution when Noah’s Arc says different? What proof do you have that a bunch of dust can turn into a man? What proof do you have that a bone can turn into a woman? Why should I believe in your god instead of Zeus, Thor, Krishna or the Flying Spaghetti Monster?

    • @2lowfatmilk606
      @2lowfatmilk606 Před 11 měsíci +7

      "just have faith and stop asking satanic questions or you will be tortured for eternity by my all loving genocidal God 😇" - every religious person I've known

  • @happilysecular2323
    @happilysecular2323 Před 11 měsíci +12

    Q: Why did the creatard jump off the building?
    A: He thought gravity was "just a theory"
    Q: Why do creatards pretend that evolution means we came from rocks?
    A: Because they themselves made it no further than brainless rocks.
    Q: Why do creatards so badly want to believe they’re intelligently designed?
    A: When else do they get the chance to say “intelligent” while describing themselves?

    • @SCOP_
      @SCOP_ Před 9 měsíci

      It’s crazy cause humans are intelligent but that doesn’t necessarily mean out cause is

    • @benjaminfernandez881
      @benjaminfernandez881 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Ad hominems are so effective nice argument!

  • @musteren99
    @musteren99 Před 3 lety +311

    Humans then: finally i can make tools
    Humans now: go back i want to be monke

    • @NAYEONiZ
      @NAYEONiZ Před 3 lety +23

      *STOP EVELUTION RETURN TO MONKE*

    • @piglin469
      @piglin469 Před 3 lety +6

      @@NAYEONiZ SHut up the jokes over used find something original
      BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

    • @footballlover7693
      @footballlover7693 Před 3 lety +6

      Hmmm MONKE

    • @willowgoober
      @willowgoober Před 3 lety +7

      @@piglin469 you dont want to let us become monke?
      *Then you must suffer*

    • @piglin469
      @piglin469 Před 3 lety

      @@willowgoober I have a gun in my poket its ever be the same like us or die. or go to robot hell

  • @jessiemayfield6749
    @jessiemayfield6749 Před 2 lety +731

    Damn the ardipithicus swinging in the tree part is cursed lol so uncanny

  • @donthidefrommeh5374
    @donthidefrommeh5374 Před rokem +9

    Back then when every humans were united and no race, religion, ethnicity existed

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před rokem +8

      Race is a human construct. So are religions.

    • @SCOP_
      @SCOP_ Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@RandallWilksreligions are but race isn’t, if it’s a social construct how come we look different?

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 9 měsíci

      @@SCOP_ I have covered that in two separate essays: first:
      *EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION - HUMAN VARIATION - Skin Color*
      There are really no peoples who are actually "white", unless they are albinos, which can occur among any human population but are most noticeable among dark skinned peoples. Everyone else has varying degrees of melanin in their Hair, skin and eyes to protect against the harmful UV radiation in sunlight. Those lacking pigmentation will have pink eyes.
      Since humans evolved in tropical Africa, dark skin is the ancestral condition and it naturally tends to predominate in areas of intense tropical sunlight. Even in Africa, there is a wide variation in skin tones, from the ebony of Nilotic peoples of the tropic north to the cafe-au-lait of the Khoi and San (KhoiSan) people that predominated in southern Africa prior to the influx of the agricultural Bantu peoples from the north. Those more recent emigrants displaced the original Khoi and San peoples, often taking their women much as European colonists did in the Americas. As a result, many dark skinned South Africans have KhoiSan mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from a female ancestor.
      Light skinned peoples of Eurasian origin in tropical areas are generally there due to recent immigration and they must take precautions against UV radiation or risk skin cancer. Light skin does have an advantage in areas of less intense sunlight, since it allows the body to produce vitamin D from sunlight.
      Europeans and peoples of northern Asia are thought of as being light skinned, but the genomes derived from the bones of early European hunter gatherers show that they had genes for dark skin and apparently got sufficient vitamin D from a diet of native plants and wild game animals. The development of agriculture in the middle east about 12,000 years ago, brought about a big change in the human diet.
      The domestication of wild grains provided a foodstuff that could be grown in huge quantities and stored for long periods of time. This change to a starch based diet, coupled with natural selection, brought about changes to the genomes of peoples who came to depend on grains for sustenance. While starch provided calories, it did not provide vitamin D. As a result, in those peoples, natural selection favored those with lighter skin.
      While starches were part of the diet of other primates, they are not so easily digested. Primates and other animals produce the Amylase enzyme in the pancreas which breaks down starches into simple sugars. It is the AMY2 gene that is expressed in the pancreas that begins that process in the intestine. At some point in primate evolution, the ancestral AMY2 gene mutated into the AMY1 gene (so named because it was discovered first) which is expressed in saliva, jump starting the conversion process. Our nearest cousins (chimps and bonobos) have a single copy of that gene but humans have multiple copies of it in their genome, producing more of that enzyme. That Copy Number Variation (CNV) differs in different human populations dependent on the starch consumption of their culture.
      As a side note, dogs, due to their long association with humans and agriculture, have evolved the ability to produce more of the Amylase enzyme via the AMY2 gene in their pancreas, a trait not found in wolves. Dogs have adapted to a higher starch diet.
      Skin color, starches, gene duplications

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 3 měsíci +7

    *ALL LIFE ON EARTH IS DEPENDENT ON THE DNA MOLECULE THAT REGULATES BODILY FUNCTIONS AND TRANSMITS HEREDITARY INFORMATION TO PROGENY.* That is very strong evidence for common ancestry in that there are about 1 million other molecules that could conceivably perform the same function.
    *THE FACT THAT THE DNA MOLECULE IS BOTH HERITABLE AND MUTABLE MAKES EVOLUTION INEVITABLE.*

  • @rnckgo2410
    @rnckgo2410 Před 4 lety +745

    “they gathered and ate everything” ah i see so thats where i got it

  • @boi_johnson
    @boi_johnson Před 4 lety +322

    0:31 "wait, its all mango?" "always has been"

    • @lucamcardle729
      @lucamcardle729 Před 4 lety +5

      You got minecraft java edition

    • @boi_johnson
      @boi_johnson Před 4 lety +2

      @@lucamcardle729 what?

    • @lucamcardle729
      @lucamcardle729 Před 4 lety +4

      @@boi_johnson do u play minecraft?

    • @boi_johnson
      @boi_johnson Před 4 lety +2

      @@lucamcardle729 yea why

    • @lucamcardle729
      @lucamcardle729 Před 4 lety +2

      @@boi_johnson what edition? I have java edition and i wanna play on a realm with someone

  • @GOD_PIRATES
    @GOD_PIRATES Před 10 měsíci +14

    The cameraman is a legend

  • @ralphyetmore
    @ralphyetmore Před 4 měsíci

    I'm relieved to see that my moobs are just a vestigial remnant of evolution, and not just the result of Cheetos.

    • @ralphyetmore
      @ralphyetmore Před 4 měsíci

      I know. Not all of the examples in the animation were male. But let me have my dumb joke. Great post, btw.

  • @allwinpaul747
    @allwinpaul747 Před 2 lety +626

    Humans 10000 B.C.E:
    " The future is going to be amazing. Endless opportunities for the human kind"
    Humans 2021 C.E:
    "I'm depressed. I don't want to be human anymore, all I want to be is monke"

    • @portillamail
      @portillamail Před 2 lety +14

      Said no one

    • @omegamyee5592
      @omegamyee5592 Před 2 lety +28

      @@portillamail said reddit

    • @omegamyee5592
      @omegamyee5592 Před 2 lety +4

      @Supreme Chancellor I know, just stating the group of weirdos that chant this stuff

    • @luftwaffle3766
      @luftwaffle3766 Před 2 lety +7

      @@omegamyee5592 Return to monke

    • @siamsiraji3169
      @siamsiraji3169 Před 2 lety +5

      @Supreme Chancellor you are basiclly describing r/Opinion XD

  • @kalvon
    @kalvon Před 3 lety +303

    Human in the future:
    A N I M E E Y E S

    • @kalvon
      @kalvon Před 3 lety +9

      What I mean is big eyes but y'know

    • @Luis_Facil
      @Luis_Facil Před 3 lety +5

      @@kalvon only a weeb would say that

    • @Luis_Facil
      @Luis_Facil Před 3 lety

      @@aizn7147 stop the cap

    • @Luis_Facil
      @Luis_Facil Před 3 lety

      @@aizn7147 that's impossible I highly doubt humans will continue evolving with the stuff we have

    • @Luis_Facil
      @Luis_Facil Před 3 lety

      @@aizn7147 how am I worrying?

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 10 měsíci +7

    *The American Association for the Advancement of Science statement on evolution:*
    *"Evolution is one of the most robust and widely accepted principles of modern science. It is the foundation for research in a wide array of scientific fields and, accordingly, a core element in science education. The AAAS Board of Directors is deeply concerned, therefore, about legislation and policies recently introduced in a number of states and localities that would undermine the teaching of evolution and deprive students of the education they need to be informed and productive citizens in an increasingly technological, global community. Although their language and strategy differ, all of these proposals, if passed, would weaken science education. The AAAS Board of Directors strongly opposes these attacks on the integrity of science and science education. They threaten not just the teaching of evolution, but students’ understanding of the biological, physical, and geological sciences."*
    Creationists, who are often scientifically illiterate, often make the claim that evolution is not really science. The AAAS, in essence, is saying they lie.

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 8 dny +2

    Scientists speak when they have something to say. Creationists speak because they must say something.

  • @greenplumboi
    @greenplumboi Před 2 lety +231

    Damn, my ancestors were ripped af. And I am here watching this video while eating fries all day.

    • @saffaanuman3885
      @saffaanuman3885 Před 2 lety +5

      Yea and thats black ppl that were the first origin people...have to show respect that they still look the same to day.And some changed due to their surroundings :)

    • @Idk-zw7hs
      @Idk-zw7hs Před 2 lety +26

      @@saffaanuman3885 what?

    • @johnstoffberg2421
      @johnstoffberg2421 Před 2 lety +9

      @@saffaanuman3885 you say WHAAAAAT? No black man I know revolve like this. They as all other homosapiens were created human.

    • @emilylsw
      @emilylsw Před 2 lety +6

      @@saffaanuman3885 lmaaoo, wtf??

    • @ok1025
      @ok1025 Před 2 lety

      @@saffaanuman3885 dude wtf???

  • @reigndigrazia1
    @reigndigrazia1 Před rokem +559

    The fact that we’re on the same planet where all this happened so many millions of years ago is incredible

    • @kleonidosti
      @kleonidosti Před rokem +41

      what if the place you are living at is the exact same place they stepped on

    • @grady2744
      @grady2744 Před rokem +43

      God created earth and we were never apes

    • @delsi26
      @delsi26 Před rokem +85

      @@grady2744 shut

    • @reck5132
      @reck5132 Před rokem

      @@grady2744 talking like you have proof shut up

    • @Universeverse923
      @Universeverse923 Před rokem +18

      @@grady2744 dont think god created everything like poop

  • @akilhussain3272
    @akilhussain3272 Před 10 měsíci +5

    source 'trust me bro'

    • @happilysecular2323
      @happilysecular2323 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Meanwhile, in some place called REALITY the proof for evolution is vast and numerous: Endogenous retroviruses, pseudogenes, syncytin, antibiotic research, ring species, domesticated animals, vestigial tails, auricular muscles in humans, arrector pili muscles in humans, continental distribution, chromosome 2 in humans, cytochrome c and b, vomeronasal organs in humans, nested Hierarchs and classification, homologous structures, divergence, appendixes, wisdom teeth, Plica semilunaris, Nictitating membranes, endemism and the observable speciation in American Goatsbeard flowers.

    • @AMC2283
      @AMC2283 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Aka against your religion

    • @Gargindale
      @Gargindale Před 10 měsíci +2

      nah just look in the mirror

    • @AdvaiticOneness1
      @AdvaiticOneness1 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Evidence of Flying donkey 🐴 source: trust me bro 🤣🤣🤣

  • @MrRrrr698
    @MrRrrr698 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This is how documentaries and video should be made on science

  • @jamesordner1368
    @jamesordner1368 Před 3 lety +95

    6:36 Oh no, run great x25000 grandpa

    • @jer4516
      @jer4516 Před 3 lety +3

      needs more 0

    • @thalassaer4137
      @thalassaer4137 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ForumLight lul stfu

    • @thanushan3981
      @thanushan3981 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ForumLight this is your problem, you are asserting that an organism without lungs cannot evolve lungs.
      But I asked you before if you assert something then you must give evidence to prove that assertion otherwise you have no room to talk.

    • @thalassaer4137
      @thalassaer4137 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ForumLight take your meds

    • @thanushan3981
      @thanushan3981 Před 3 lety

      @@ForumLight I never said that what cant be disprove is true, Im Saying that you are asserting that it's impossible for evolution to occur. The burden on proof is on you now to prove why it cannot happen. This is not to prove evolution but to rather to let you know that you can't be 100% certain with what you say.

  • @finley7464
    @finley7464 Před 3 lety +2328

    go back I want to be monke

    • @electricc437
      @electricc437 Před 3 lety +102

      Your comment reminded me of the "upgrade., fuck go back!" meme 😂

    • @fdfdfddfh6430
      @fdfdfddfh6430 Před 3 lety +28

      Me too🐵🐒🦍🦍🦧🦧

    • @ethanb.5497
      @ethanb.5497 Před 3 lety +62

      We were never monkeys

    • @ethanb.5497
      @ethanb.5497 Před 3 lety +43

      We are made of dust

    • @ethanb.5497
      @ethanb.5497 Před 3 lety +20

      @@toastmaker5696 don't reject truth

  • @happilysecular2323
    @happilysecular2323 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Non-smoking is an addiction.

  • @walkergarya
    @walkergarya Před 5 měsíci +4

    No creationist can show real evidence for their creationism or that refutes the Science of Evolution.

  • @George-pl7dw
    @George-pl7dw Před 3 lety +870

    That was a key stage, when they started to bury the dead, showed care and respect for other individuals plus the thinking process to prevent the body from being consumed by other preditory animals.

    • @saintmichael3296
      @saintmichael3296 Před 3 lety +3

      Good though, but don't you think another spieces don't respect other individuals

    • @vienodkumar7727
      @vienodkumar7727 Před 3 lety

      Uh good

    • @gamdanyunizar7849
      @gamdanyunizar7849 Před 2 lety +51

      The birth of morals and ethics!

    • @sextusempiricus7913
      @sextusempiricus7913 Před 2 lety +1

      Rats don't care if you're a king or a peasant.

    • @a2a918
      @a2a918 Před 2 lety +10

      Sorry buddy, humans actually devolved over time, we were stronger taller and had much more knowledge than we do now.. darwinism explained away slavery. God bless you all.

  • @Strange_Man1911
    @Strange_Man1911 Před 3 lety +73

    2:08 The first Belle Delphine

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 10 měsíci +6

    GOD WAS A TREMENDOUS INVENTION AND A GREAT BENEFIT TO MANKIND. Before man created God, they felt really stupid. Confronted with any question, all they could say was "Gee, I don't know" and no matter how hard they thought, they couldn't think of a better answer.
    Then someone came up with the brilliant idea of God. It was wonderful, it obviated the need to think about anything. The answer could always be "Gee, I don't know, it must be God." Problem solved. The "God concept" alleviated the need to think about mundane things and they could concentrate on serious questions, like "How many bibles can we sell?" There was no incentive for human intellect to advance beyond that of ancient goat herders. Religions need to perpetuate ignorance in order to preserve their influence.
    It is quite likely that the "god concept" originated with Homo erectus as an explanation for thunder.

    • @Ympatisec2K24
      @Ympatisec2K24 Před 10 měsíci

      Thinking that humans Descend from animals is casa of psychiatric hospitalization

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@Ympatisec2K24 Your ignorance and cognitive deficiency not withstanding, "Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution". - Theodosius Dobzhansky

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 10 měsíci +3

      TRUTH is determined by EVIDENCE, not by what anyone says and not by words in an old book. The rules of evidence are this:
      IF YOU DON'T HAVE ANY... *YOU LOSE!*

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před měsícem +2

    *SOME PEOPLE STILL ASK, "WHY ARE THERE STILL APES (OR MONKEYS)?"*
    It should be obvious that such people, usually creationists, lack an understanding of what evolution is and how it works. Apparently someone told such people that humans evolved from apes, and from that, due to their lack of education, they assumed that all apes were supposed to evolve into humans. That is not how evolution works, but creationists have no interest in learning anything other than creation mythology.
    They might just as well have asked "If dogs are descended from wolves, why are there still wolves?" Or even "If Americans came from Europe, why are there still Europeans?" Just as dogs descended from a population of wolves, so too did humans evolve from one particular population of apes.
    What we know is that the first apes evolved in Africa during the Miocene, about 25 million years ago from a population of Cercopiths. Whereas monkeys run on all four feet across the TOPS of branches, apes evolved skeletal changes giving the ability to ability to swing, arm over arm, from branch to branch. Evolution works to make each species best suited to their environment. For apes, that environment was the forest and they are well suited for it. At one time there were about 30 different species of apes in those forests.
    Had environmental conditions remained the same, we would still see forests covering the whole African continent. However, conditions did not stay the same; the climate became drier. As a result, forested areas shrank in size and were replaced by grasslands, the African savanna, with just a few scattered trees. The shrinking forests put different ape species in competition with each other and many went extinct.
    Then, about 6 or 7 million years ago, one population of apes split, with some of them opting for life on that open savanna. Other apes are capable of walking upright, they are just not comfortable doing so for long periods of time. Recent experiments with trained chimps on a treadmill have shown that for them, walking upright was more efficient in terms of energy expended than quadrupedal walking. Chimps and other apes though must shift their weight from side to side while walking bipedaly.
    That savanna environment favored skeletal changes that placed the knees directly under the center of gravity. By about 4 mya, our ancestral australopithecines had almost the same skeletal features as modern humans. Changes to pelvis, femur, knees and feet gave them a smooth stride that was efficient for long distance travel. They did however, retain long arms and curved fingers enabling them to climb a tree when danger threatened. Their brains, as measured by cranial capacity, were only slightly larger than that of today's chimpanzees.
    The apes that remained in a forest environment were under little pressure to change as they were well adapted to it. They became the ancestors of today's chimps and bonobos. Those living on the open savanna were presented challenges not experienced by woodland apes, and that required greater intelligence and cooperation to overcome them. It set their descendants on a different evolutionary trajectory that culminated in us.

  • @neilshinde8641
    @neilshinde8641 Před 2 lety +53

    5:57 : "Last step was to colonize the planet"
    britishers in 18th century : let's do the last step again

  • @Guest-ez7vk
    @Guest-ez7vk Před 3 lety +362

    One thing I learned.... we evolved into scared humans from fearless animals

    • @richkidd1063
      @richkidd1063 Před 3 lety

      Hell no

    • @jae2946
      @jae2946 Před 3 lety +85

      better to be a smart coward rather than an ignorant brave person.

    • @Literallyryangosling777
      @Literallyryangosling777 Před 3 lety +16

      A living coward? Or a dead hero?

    • @user-nm5dp8ky9e
      @user-nm5dp8ky9e Před 3 lety +8

      No, I’m a chicken.

    • @Flokoli1
      @Flokoli1 Před 3 lety +9

      Fearless? I really don't think so. Fear is one of the biggest factor that motives our behavior and make us vulnerable to manipulation

  • @happilysecular2323
    @happilysecular2323 Před 10 měsíci +7

    Clueless creatard cliche number 56: Micro evolution is proven but macro evolution isn’t.
    Reality: First of all, this is cherry-picking. It’s like saying that “2+2=4 but 2 million + 2 million doesn’t = 4 million.” Secondly, macro evolution is speciation, which has been observable in American Goatsbeard flowers since the 1950s.

  • @kayday6598
    @kayday6598 Před 3 lety +203

    0:53 searching for your phone charger in the dark

  • @jokpok7119
    @jokpok7119 Před 4 lety +393

    4:07 rare video of man without wifi

  • @kirkthiets2771
    @kirkthiets2771 Před 10 měsíci +5

    I subscribed just because I like "scientists against myths" quote

  • @chriscarson1256
    @chriscarson1256 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Excellent show, thank you.

  • @Sk8rGamer
    @Sk8rGamer Před 3 lety +356

    2:10 such a gross sight im sorry

  • @redbrixanimations
    @redbrixanimations Před 3 lety +275

    6:35 bro why didn’t the cameraman do anything

  • @Ouwayplayz
    @Ouwayplayz Před 4 měsíci

    “Man was now armed”😂😂😂

  • @thewonderfulworldofsammy7776

    This was so nostalgic
    I remember me and my monkey friends where climbing trees eating fruit

  • @GOOMBAKINGTHEFIRST
    @GOOMBAKINGTHEFIRST Před 4 lety +245

    Me when I was 9 turning off the lights in the livingroom: 6:28

  • @lekevire
    @lekevire Před 8 měsíci +4

    Randall -- out of curiosity, how do you have the time on your hands to respond and post several comments on so many videos that are evolution based? Isn't it tiring, especially when you got like 50,000 people arguing with you all at once?

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 8 měsíci +3

      I am a writer and educator. It is my duty to inform and I share what I have learned. I have been writing essays over the years, some of them in response to creationist claims. It is not necessary for me to reinvent the wheel when creationist claims get repeated time after time. I have challenged creationists to try to refute what I write. What do I get? Insults and "Nuh-uh", "Nuh-uh", "Nuh-uh", ad nauseum. Denial is not refutation. If anyone were to provide verifiable evidence that something I wrote is wrong, I will be happy to change it.
      I'm curious though, where did you get that 50,000 people were arguing with me?

    • @AnteroX1234
      @AnteroX1234 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@RandallWilks Please never stop writing these.

    • @CJFashi
      @CJFashi Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​@@RandallWilks you are a good educator, I must say. When i first started arguing with creationists, I was a total novice about evolutionary theory. Reading your comments and replies, I've gained much knowledge.

    • @RandallWilks
      @RandallWilks Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@CJFashi Glad I could help. You make me proud.

  • @abhishekshayana8509
    @abhishekshayana8509 Před rokem +3

    Just Amazing!!

  • @gottalivehappy
    @gottalivehappy Před 4 lety +186

    3:13 “Are ya winning, son?”

  • @CR-kt9ex
    @CR-kt9ex Před 3 lety +43

    Old day humans:not scared of a mammoth Humans now:*scared of spiders*

    • @wowlol2703
      @wowlol2703 Před 3 lety +5

      Bruh im afraid of daddy long legs ;_;

    • @theronoxstudios5735
      @theronoxstudios5735 Před 3 lety +3

      Old humans literally killed the biggest animals and yet were scared of spiders

    • @mfra959
      @mfra959 Před 3 lety +1

      Spiders is Pet in Australia

    • @wowlol2703
      @wowlol2703 Před 3 lety

      @@mfra959 oh shoot that means even more scarier insects or bugs

    • @theeclectic2919
      @theeclectic2919 Před 3 lety

      Humans now: Afraid of Free Speech.

  • @asrafazman6233
    @asrafazman6233 Před 7 měsíci +12

    darwin: 🙉
    I am fooling people today with my theory

    • @AMC2283
      @AMC2283 Před 6 měsíci +3

      You making evolutionary biology synonymous with Darwin is an instant loss of any credibility

    • @e.ggamerguy5793
      @e.ggamerguy5793 Před 6 měsíci +4

      And you are fooling people by not shutting up

    • @Suspressable
      @Suspressable Před 4 měsíci +1

      I doubt Darwin created his theory in one day. Also, it’s more plausible than magic.

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před rokem +4

    Wise men speak because they have something to say; Fools because they have to say something. - Plato (c.400 BCE)

  • @AlternateBottle
    @AlternateBottle Před 3 lety +160

    CZcams: *sees naked ape* that's all good
    CZcams: *sees naked human* TAKE IT DOWN TAKE IT DOWN

  • @aadithyadev7778
    @aadithyadev7778 Před 3 lety +438

    Thanks to the animation team who worked hard for this

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 10 měsíci +5

    The Geological Society of America Position Statement:
    Adopted October 2005; revised May 2009, November 2012, May 2017, and October 2021.
    Evolution and the directly related concept of deep (geologic) time are essential parts of science curricula at all levels of education. The evolution of life on Earth stands as one of the central concepts of modern science that is accepted by the scientific community. Two centuries of research in geology, paleontology, and biology have produced an increasingly detailed, consistent, and robust picture of how life on Earth evolved. Creationism, whether presented as creation “science” or intelligent design, attempts to explain complicated phenomena of the natural world by invoking a supernatural creator or designer. Creationism cannot be tested using the scientific method and therefore has no place in a science curriculum.

  • @eight-zero-eight
    @eight-zero-eight Před 8 měsíci

    props to the cameraman who got hit by a austrolapith 😂

  • @natemyers4946
    @natemyers4946 Před 2 lety +144

    *"Man was now armed."*
    That sounded amazing and highly ominous at the same time

  • @bigfishtokyocat7789
    @bigfishtokyocat7789 Před 3 lety +175

    3:06 props to the camera man almost getting attacked by the ape woman...

    • @mrcaptainfarte3619
      @mrcaptainfarte3619 Před 3 lety +7

      camera man has balls of titanium

    • @iceguy1478
      @iceguy1478 Před 3 lety

      @@mrcaptainfarte3619 I’m the cameraman 🤯

    • @theoneonyoutube4925
      @theoneonyoutube4925 Před 2 lety

      😆😆😆😆

    • @parthsharma9699
      @parthsharma9699 Před 2 lety +3

      How do you know that's a women? Maybe they are non-binary. Smh people have no hearts /s

    • @iceguy1478
      @iceguy1478 Před 2 lety

      @@parthsharma9699 lmao you can’t choose your gender if your born a man your a man for the rest of your life if your born a girl you a girl forever but nice joke

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před 10 měsíci +6

    Atheism is a non prophet world view that rejects magic as an explanation.

  • @elshopper
    @elshopper Před 6 měsíci +1

    great video, showed it to my kid and he also liked it.

  • @adelinrapcore
    @adelinrapcore Před 3 lety +328

    Neanderthals and homo sapiens where two diferent human species that coexisted, neanderthals were not ancestors of homo sapiens

    • @reflex1349
      @reflex1349 Před 3 lety +6

      Yea

    • @thesrilankanguy3652
      @thesrilankanguy3652 Před 3 lety +14

      exactly why do like 40% of people think that we evolved from neanderthals.

    • @somedude1899
      @somedude1899 Před 3 lety +24

      From my understanding the Homo Erectus is the common ancestor as they occupied all of Africa, Asia and Europe. Interbreeding between the Neanderthals and Homo Sapiens created the modern man.

    • @hiitsmyname6987
      @hiitsmyname6987 Před 3 lety +2

      @@somedude1899 cro magnon is modern man

    • @biz2046
      @biz2046 Před 3 lety +19

      God made us

  • @TheUnavator
    @TheUnavator Před 4 lety +95

    " for millions of years our planet has been floating in space "
    Yes. That's what a planet does

    • @accurategamer7085
      @accurategamer7085 Před 4 lety +2

      😂😂

    • @pashapasovski5860
      @pashapasovski5860 Před 4 lety +6

      Try billions

    • @mayarii4715
      @mayarii4715 Před 3 lety +1

      Underrated lol

    • @SCP--oz6oz
      @SCP--oz6oz Před 3 lety +1

      @@pashapasovski5860 there’s no proof that the earth has been here for billions of years

    • @mycolemae
      @mycolemae Před 3 lety +2

      If we evolved from monkeys then why are mokeys turning into humans today, the world has forgit its creator WHICH IS GOD THE ALMIGHTY 👑✝️!

  • @RandallWilks
    @RandallWilks Před měsícem +2

    The Christian "Old Testament" is actually the Hebrew Tanakh written by Hebrew priests and scribes during the Babylonian Exile (597 to 538 BCE). That 'Exile' was a factual event that began with Nebuchadnezzar's siege of Jerusalem in 597 BCE. That began the first of several deportations in which much of the population of the Kingdom of Judah (the Jews) were forced from Jerusalem and the arid Judean hills to Babylon on the banks of the Euphrates River. That was in Mesopotamia where floods were a regular occurrence. During their roughly 60 year stay in Babylon, they would have experienced several floods which they had never seen in their arid homeland. They would have heard the Sumerian story of a great flood and its hero Ut-napishtim. It was a great story, so they changed his name to Noah and put it in the bible. They would have also heard the legend of how Sargon II (Sargon the Great) as a baby was saved by his mother floating him down the Euphrates River in a reed boat sealed with pitch. That was another great story and, with a couple of name changes, it too went into the bible. Of course everyone in Babylon knew of King Hammurabi, the great law giver, whose laws are the basis of modern day legal systems. The bible needed a hero like that. And so it was that over those 60 years a story emerged that served to give the Judean peoples a foundation mythology. Six hundred years later, a new religion, Christianity, adopted it as their "Old Testament".

  • @haydendetavis214
    @haydendetavis214 Před rokem

    Love how homo habolus had a clean shave

    • @user-sw1tq8he3h
      @user-sw1tq8he3h Před měsícem

      Somehow habilis had thicc fur on his back and legs. Wich were completly lost in homo erectus.

  • @ananthakrishnandakshinamur7367

    Early humans: killed elephants
    Humans now: scared of a mosquito
    Also humans: I am a geniusssssss!

    • @luka9967
      @luka9967 Před 2 lety +13

      I mean
      If other animals evolved reason and discovered what diseases are they'd be scared too

    • @leticianeal9147
      @leticianeal9147 Před 2 lety +13

      I'd say annoyed more than scared.

    • @angrydorito3252
      @angrydorito3252 Před 2 lety +10

      No one is scared of a mosquito

    • @hohohohehehe6910
      @hohohohehehe6910 Před 2 lety +1

      You're not, you can't spell genius.

    • @Shicomogs
      @Shicomogs Před 2 lety

      @@angrydorito3252 the op is

  • @LilHoss4k
    @LilHoss4k Před 4 lety +74

    2:15 i feel uncomfortable

    • @denbuilds273
      @denbuilds273 Před 3 lety +2

      Lil Hoss I’m wheezing 😂🤣

    • @rebuskecebong
      @rebuskecebong Před 3 lety +1

      Lmaoo

    • @SofiaBerruxSubs
      @SofiaBerruxSubs Před 3 lety +1

      Why?

    • @rebuskecebong
      @rebuskecebong Před 3 lety +3

      @@SofiaBerruxSubs *c h e s t*

    • @ToBeOrNotToBeThatIsTheQuestion
      @ToBeOrNotToBeThatIsTheQuestion Před 3 lety +1

      @MOLLY VIBE There are lots of documentaries on this. They don't need to. They are comfortable in their environment. And how do you know they haven't evolved already and won't look more like us in a few million years??

  • @kabal28
    @kabal28 Před 11 měsíci +2

    The 10 y/o in me laughed at the swinging boobs lol. Thank you for the educational video

  • @gohappyplanettv
    @gohappyplanettv Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you for this video, keep going,

  • @dark_antihero
    @dark_antihero Před 3 lety +285

    4:25 me trying to find who made all the bad decisions in my life