What is Impossible in Evolution?

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  • čas přidán 11. 05. 2024
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    Could humans ever evolve to have wings? Why don’t fish have propellers? Why don’t tigers have wheels? Why don’t zebras have laser turrets? These might all seem like stupid questions (and maybe they are!) but they can teach us a lot about how evolution actually works, and how it doesn’t work.
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Komentáře • 10K

  • @besmart
    @besmart  Před 3 lety +3805

    We’re aware some people are seeing glitches and artifacts on the video. We’ve reviewed and it’s not in the master video file! Seems to be a problem on CZcams’s end with how they encode the videos (we aren’t the only channel affected), and we hope it’s fixed soon.

    • @RudeAlert
      @RudeAlert Před 3 lety +89

      THANK YOU for mentioning this! I was starting to freak out, wondering if it was my computer about to croak. Well, at least it's not just your channel, and this was a great video anyways, so who care about a few weird visual glitches. Keep up the good work.

    • @brokeandtired
      @brokeandtired Před 3 lety +48

      But evolution can evolve laser Zebras... It evolves humans who then can put lasers on Zebras.

    • @mixtlillness9825
      @mixtlillness9825 Před 3 lety +36

      I see. So it’s not the drugs then.

    • @mixei4
      @mixei4 Před 3 lety +21

      I've already started looking for a hidden message there.

    • @Goryus
      @Goryus Před 3 lety +15

      5-legged cats have actually been observed...maybe worth a correction.

  • @Happy-yf8bc
    @Happy-yf8bc Před 3 lety +12134

    “Why is there no giraffe-sized chickens”
    Because they got wiped out by a space rock

    • @Eldritch-1
      @Eldritch-1 Před 3 lety +738

      became KFC in the modern age.

    • @hydrolito
      @hydrolito Před 3 lety +221

      Some guy might think it is possible to clone them and figure out a way to do it that was plot of movie Death Birds.

    • @motazfawzi2504
      @motazfawzi2504 Před 3 lety +112

      They are exclusive for the Skyrim DLC of the Universe.

    • @ygotsvlog3762
      @ygotsvlog3762 Před 3 lety +36

      @@Eldritch-1 they got cooked

    • @antz4thehour601
      @antz4thehour601 Před 3 lety +13

      True

  • @so-ares
    @so-ares Před 3 lety +22499

    "Nature is infinitely creative" - Keep creating crabs...

  • @breadloafbrad
    @breadloafbrad Před rokem +633

    The hills and valleys representation of evolution is actually an incredible way of visualizing it

    • @vast634
      @vast634 Před rokem +34

      The same concept lies behind training artificial neural nets. Its an optimization problem, searching in the space of opportunities.

    • @clapdrix72
      @clapdrix72 Před 4 měsíci +12

      It's a useful framework for solving a lot of problems. Machine learning for one.

    • @Dad-rk8pi
      @Dad-rk8pi Před 2 měsíci +8

      ​@@vast634Exactly, i was visualising gradient descent when he was talking about evolution

    • @steelbear2063
      @steelbear2063 Před měsícem +2

      Though there's something to be said about moving downwards. No it's not really downwards, but simplification is a thing also, where organisms lose some traits

    • @JakeEast68
      @JakeEast68 Před měsícem +5

      ​@@steelbear2063I was just thinking about the fact that if a species lost the need for something, they could "travel back down the hill" and possibly go up a new one

  • @MartijnMuller
    @MartijnMuller Před 9 měsíci +332

    Some hairless ape: why don't we have giraffe-sized chickens?
    Dinosaurs: am I a joke to you?

  • @AhmedAffraz
    @AhmedAffraz Před 3 lety +9302

    "If humans could fly, we'd consider it exercise and never do it" - Ron Swanson

    • @jayav2877
      @jayav2877 Před 3 lety +413

      I didn't know someone had said this before and honestly had a conversation about this last year.

    • @faustin289
      @faustin289 Před 3 lety +613

      ... unless you could mate mid-flight.

    • @Unknown-tv3bi
      @Unknown-tv3bi Před 3 lety +343

      @@faustin289 That would take a lot of mating.

    • @sam_9228
      @sam_9228 Před 3 lety +30

      I miss Parks and Rec lol

    • @InfinityOrNone
      @InfinityOrNone Před 3 lety +444

      @@faustin289 Flying is complicated enough as is, I doubt anyone would be able to pull it off mid-coitus. Take the Bald Eagle's mid-air mating; they don't do it while flying, they do it while _falling._

  • @vekkimheng8766
    @vekkimheng8766 Před 2 lety +3807

    People : where's the laser zebras?!
    Evolution : crabs, take it or leave it.

    • @zeppelincraft1443
      @zeppelincraft1443 Před 2 lety +134

      While crabs: We have microscopic vision that defines more than enough colors and we can make plasma out of our claws.

    • @kadmuspl830
      @kadmuspl830 Před 2 lety +31

      insert "silence brand" meme

    • @anotherrandomguy8871
      @anotherrandomguy8871 Před 2 lety +87

      Pistol shrimp who can fire heat bubbles out of their huge claw like a cannon: sup

    • @newmeta2668
      @newmeta2668 Před 2 lety +58

      @@anotherrandomguy8871 meanwhile mantis shrimp who can also create heat bubbles on impact with their club like arms: sup

    • @caseyhansen4467
      @caseyhansen4467 Před 2 lety +5

      Lmao I love that I understood the reference 😂

  • @csabalako1788
    @csabalako1788 Před rokem +361

    Excuses, excuses... I want my zebras with laser turrets!

    • @blendersparticlesystem5220
      @blendersparticlesystem5220 Před rokem +5

      Everybody does

    • @crazydinosaur8945
      @crazydinosaur8945 Před 4 měsíci +7

      @@blendersparticlesystem5220 think Lions dont

    • @GabiN64
      @GabiN64 Před 3 měsíci +15

      ​@@crazydinosaur8945 they should evolve deflector shields then

    • @jellyfishno.22
      @jellyfishno.22 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Forget zebras, why don't I have laser turrets!?

    • @doktormcnasty
      @doktormcnasty Před 11 dny

      @@jellyfishno.22 Zebras need them more than you do because of all the lions, crocodiles, wild dogs, & hyenas they have to content with.

  • @gilgonzalez8985
    @gilgonzalez8985 Před 5 měsíci +107

    “You don’t just get something because it’s cool”
    My financial decisions beg to differ.

    • @RanEdgar-ok3wk
      @RanEdgar-ok3wk Před 24 dny

      🫵😨 no stop how dare save your money good sir/mis/they
      Don’t do itttttt😭😭

  • @joshuasims5421
    @joshuasims5421 Před 3 lety +6414

    Giraffe size chicken isn’t remotely impossible, that’s a T-rex

    • @toastiesburned9929
      @toastiesburned9929 Před 3 lety +287

      Yeah, but they would have to switch back on a lot of genes that might have mutated away. Re-evolving giantism would probably be pretty hard for a domesticated species. At least without a special breeding program... 🤔

    • @spacesharkwriter6554
      @spacesharkwriter6554 Před 3 lety +159

      Yes, the tyrannosaurus genus died a long time ago, trex was one of the last tyrannosaurs, t-rex was already on the decline, it was evolving into a bird, it was growing feathers and turning into a chicken, the atmosphere and the climate, it was more efficient to be a small bird, think about that the next time you eat chicken wings, 11 year old dinosaur genus out ✌🏻

    • @rogeriopenna9014
      @rogeriopenna9014 Před 3 lety +90

      @@Clifford_Banes Dino bones were just like bird bones.
      And no, duck bones are stronger than the more solid mammal bones with the same cross section.
      That's exactly the reason why dinosaurs could grow to larger sizes than mammals. With the same cross section, a dino bone is stronger and thus can support more mass than a mammal bone

    • @saturnianrings3920
      @saturnianrings3920 Před 3 lety +77

      It’s CRISPR time.

    • @SirSpiro
      @SirSpiro Před 3 lety +6

      LMAO

  • @matheuroux5134
    @matheuroux5134 Před 3 lety +3084

    If we all start actively pretending that large arms are super attractive, and seek mates with massive arms, that would be the first step towards a wing evolution.

    • @spiderpickle3255
      @spiderpickle3255 Před 3 lety +427

      Human hands > wings
      Our hands are one of those extremely high evolutionary peaks, arguably a higher one than wings. Look into how our fingernails absolutely blow away claws and then consider what our dexterity has enabled us to build as a species.

    • @bsu5574
      @bsu5574 Před 3 lety +501

      @@spiderpickle3255 b..but...wings.... :((

    • @asiantom4935
      @asiantom4935 Před 3 lety +255

      @@spiderpickle3255 ok but wings

    • @monad_tcp
      @monad_tcp Před 3 lety +44

      nah, the only thing we all know it will happen is that humans will get higher and higher

    • @chargemankent
      @chargemankent Před 3 lety +75

      @@monad_tcp Welp... I think that's enough weed today~

  • @weston407
    @weston407 Před rokem +63

    I had the EXACT same experience with Return to Oz and the wheelers when I was a kid - the wheeler looking through the keyhole absolutely terrified me

  • @Mightydoggo
    @Mightydoggo Před 8 měsíci +15

    I remember my grandparents having a Trabant. It was loud, stinky, had a tendency to fall apart and if you hit a cobblestone road, it would severely hamper your reproduction capabilities for a few days. Still the flexibility compared to the horse cart we often took to the market at weekends was superb. You also had no heater, so we used to put one of those propane gas canisters on the backseat with a heating unit on it. Oh and the doors stopped working towards the end, so we had to enter/leave through the window. Yeah... "Good" old times, eh?
    Nowadays even on the countryside every family has at least 2 cars, often more and you even see stuff like Teslas from time to time. Among a lot of tractors and the occasional horse/dog cart.

  • @juksleo6257
    @juksleo6257 Před 3 lety +1325

    **Looks at the thumbnail**
    **looks at my pet Zebra**
    Me: "it's ok Gerald, don't listen to him, your lasers will grow in a few years"

  • @bubblebeamm
    @bubblebeamm Před 3 lety +1553

    I dont even want wings man i just want the lumbar spine to be able to support us

    • @azhero09
      @azhero09 Před 3 lety +143

      A truly underappreciated comment

    • @blazingtrs6348
      @blazingtrs6348 Před 3 lety +146

      for that the people with back pain shouldn’t propagate

    • @azhero09
      @azhero09 Před 3 lety +44

      @@blazingtrs6348 let's do it for science then

    • @zombkillrb
      @zombkillrb Před 3 lety +75

      I'm telling y'all cybernetics is where it's at, I heard developers talk about how the only people who would use it would be those who need it like amputees but I'm not convinced that if it were really effecient that it wouldn't become used recreationally and complimentary like to eliminate the effects of carpal tunnel syndrome or others like it

    • @whatwhale5888
      @whatwhale5888 Před 3 lety +35

      @@zombkillrb oh for sure, I dont dount people will be recreationally augmenting themselves for medical reasons but also for fun. Personally im looking forward to eye implants. Like imagine being able to take pics or zoom or have night vision with your eyes

  • @marrrtin
    @marrrtin Před 11 měsíci +28

    Worth mentioning that nature makes wheels, or at least rotors at the molecular scale, such as a flagellum, like a propellor for a protist, or the famous "waterwheel driven by protons", ATP Synthase.

    • @hoi-polloi1863
      @hoi-polloi1863 Před 18 dny +1

      Right, on the macro scale wheels get really hard because you have to be able to feed the "spinny bits" without having them attached to the circulatory system. At tiny scales all kinds of great stuff becomes practical!

  • @KuyoCuteeTv
    @KuyoCuteeTv Před 4 měsíci +10

    im a simple guy, i see zebra with laser, i click.
    this means there is a possibility of mermaids existing

  • @shallowseller3893
    @shallowseller3893 Před 2 lety +1576

    5 millions years later
    Laser Zebra: Well guess what.

  • @saims.2402
    @saims.2402 Před 3 lety +2682

    When I first learned about evolution, it was from Pokémon, I was 4 and I sat in a corner trying to evolve.
    Edit: I only believed evolution works like in Pokémon until I was 8 or 9.

    • @eternalblue4660
      @eternalblue4660 Před 3 lety +253

      Well, did it work?

    • @saims.2402
      @saims.2402 Před 3 lety +578

      @@eternalblue4660 I evolved into a bored teenager.

    • @amalirfan
      @amalirfan Před 3 lety +124

      @@saims.2402 now where you at, did you get to adulthood :D

    • @saims.2402
      @saims.2402 Před 3 lety +273

      @@amalirfan now I’m evolved into a CZcams commenting teenager

    • @rogeriopenna9014
      @rogeriopenna9014 Před 3 lety +102

      Pokemon style evolution is EXACTLY how creationists think Evolution works, and use as a strawman to discredit it. "Why don´t we see apes turning into humans... like right now?". "Why no ducks turning into crocodiles?"

  • @antigrav6004
    @antigrav6004 Před 9 měsíci +7

    'when you're the best, why try harder?' - crabs

  • @TheSniff517
    @TheSniff517 Před 20 dny +17

    "We're still not gonna grow wings though."
    Me: Drinks Redbull

  • @miketacos9034
    @miketacos9034 Před 3 lety +593

    Birds: "If only we had hands instead of these useless wings, so we could build laser cannons."

    • @Galaxia7
      @Galaxia7 Před 3 lety +25

      Said 50 % of New Zealand birds

    • @rowandunning6877
      @rowandunning6877 Před 3 lety +2

      yeah, a lot of birds are fuckin' smart

    • @God-ch8lq
      @God-ch8lq Před 3 lety +5

      Haha crows go brrrr

    • @ExtantFrodo2
      @ExtantFrodo2 Před 3 lety +11

      Building prosthetics for animals so they can be tool users... hmm.

    • @tres-2b299
      @tres-2b299 Před 2 lety +5

      Birds: i wish we had hands
      Humans: i wish we had wings

  • @ewanbiesinger7667
    @ewanbiesinger7667 Před 2 lety +2623

    A lovely way to sum this up would be to state that “evolution is lazy”. Evolution will solve a problem in the easiest way possible. And will never go out of its way to make a species superior.

    • @anunknownperson4018
      @anunknownperson4018 Před 2 lety +90

      it will take years for species evolution to change, look at radiation it last till probably more than 24 yrs, maybe in the future humans or animals will resist radiation?

    • @ewanbiesinger7667
      @ewanbiesinger7667 Před 2 lety +153

      @@anunknownperson4018 surely resistance to radiation is one of the things that is actively being worked on by evolution right now… However as you correctly stated, this will take years.

    • @patricknogueiraa
      @patricknogueiraa Před 2 lety +193

      Exactly, evolution has nothing to do with being superior, it is about being fit for your environment at the lowest cost. That's why not all animals end up big, predators or having high intelligence

    • @kilroy987
      @kilroy987 Před 2 lety +37

      Evolution: Make owl ears asymmeterical so they can use sound to see, let this snail shed its body and grow a new one from just its head, make this walking stick look just like a leaf, and this beetle shoots hot chemicals from its butt.

    • @MultiMolly21
      @MultiMolly21 Před 2 lety +11

      Oh yes it will. Right now, we are Nature's darlings because we're going to save the planet, once we get our ducks in a row that is. We needed the infinitely powerful Atomic Bomb, and for that She was willing to sacrifice trillions of us, but now that we have that, and the capacity to spot a meteor on its way to smash us, we can get civilized again and clean things up a bit. Remember, we're not done evolving; we're a work in progress. But we're also the Saints here, and all of Life on Earth is counting on us.

  • @onimaruvt
    @onimaruvt Před 11 měsíci +8

    the landscape graph was such a good visual representation

  • @Mikado8
    @Mikado8 Před rokem +14

    It’s been a really long time since the last time i learned that many new things with so many really great explanations

  • @Loth_kat
    @Loth_kat Před 2 lety +1694

    Einstein: "You can't teach a fish to climb a tree."
    Mudskipper: *climbs tree
    Einstein: ....

    • @odeofdespair
      @odeofdespair Před 2 lety +179

      Funny, but you got the quote wrong. Its "If you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree it will live its whole life thinking its stupid." or something to that affect.

    • @Loth_kat
      @Loth_kat Před 2 lety +95

      @@odeofdespair ye but however stupid the fish thought it was, it finally climbed a tree

    • @sayakchoudhury9711
      @sayakchoudhury9711 Před 2 lety +34

      There's a fish literally called Climbing Perch

    • @Loth_kat
      @Loth_kat Před 2 lety +1

      @@ludnixvonbithoven2644 xD not exactly how he said it. It's just for jokes

    • @ligth3977
      @ligth3977 Před 2 lety +1

      There are people with disabilities that did the almost impossible.

  • @darkwowplayer
    @darkwowplayer Před 2 lety +3686

    "Why haven't Zebras evolved laser turrets to fend off lions?"
    FINALLY, SOMEONE IS ASKING THE REAL QUESTIONS!

    • @brolydictcumberbatchmontou401
      @brolydictcumberbatchmontou401 Před rokem +78

      is an electrical eel not close enough to an equally doable evolutionary trait? I mean tasering crocodiles or lions sneaking up to you in the watering hole seems like a good savannah trait, why don't we see a lot of land animals develop this trait? Because it isn't all that useful on land, and takes a greater amount of food consumption to fuel the organs needed to generate the necessary stores of attack and in the Zebra's case why need it when you have a heard and one the most powerful hind kicks per square inch. A secondary defense system in an a mostly non aquatic life style doesn't evolve because it isn't efficient. Not when you already have useful defense systems.

    • @brolydictcumberbatchmontou401
      @brolydictcumberbatchmontou401 Před rokem +20

      And if I also add electric eels have developed this unique defense as an effective offense system as well. So it has double benefits for a predator. Not an herbivore in the long run on land.

    • @terrytheinsane
      @terrytheinsane Před rokem +18

      It is because zebras don't need laser turrets, they use their stripes to hypnotize predators

    • @evalynnlindquist8111
      @evalynnlindquist8111 Před rokem +12

      I was more concerned about sharks with freakin Lazer beams on their heads

    • @santy214gamer5
      @santy214gamer5 Před rokem +2

      @@terrytheinsane I hope you where joking because that is the most incorrect statement I have heard in a long time

  • @oddinvestigator
    @oddinvestigator Před 7 měsíci +3

    Best way I've seen someone explaining square cube law. The volume increases at a higuer rate in comparison to area. It's possible to create a relation between the increments, but impossible directly between volume and area, as the area/volume ratio doesn't exist since the units differ.

  • @Somebody_VK
    @Somebody_VK Před rokem +4

    Well, I suppose it's time to lock a zebra in a laser room for a couple million years.

  • @Eralen00
    @Eralen00 Před 3 lety +217

    Europeans: "You don't use wheels? You know, those round thingies that spin on axles?"
    Mesoamericans: "Oh we put those on our toys for children"

    • @chandrasekarannatarajan3542
      @chandrasekarannatarajan3542 Před 3 lety +17

      Then they sacrifice them

    • @RhodianColossus
      @RhodianColossus Před 3 lety +21

      @@chandrasekarannatarajan3542 there were people other than aztecs in the americas you know

    • @thememoryhole9355
      @thememoryhole9355 Před 3 lety

      I'll bet the toys were copied from other cultures from wheeled societies, perhaps the Chinese.

    • @Sorrowdusk
      @Sorrowdusk Před 3 lety +12

      @@thememoryhole9355 they'd have to MEET the Chinese first

    • @thememoryhole9355
      @thememoryhole9355 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Sorrowdusk Yes. I'm suggesting the Chinese may have made it to the Americas, among others.

  • @ariedevs
    @ariedevs Před 3 lety +910

    Meanwhile in another multiverse zebrazooka just started their world war 9.

  • @SirNobleIZH
    @SirNobleIZH Před rokem +11

    But I WANT MY LASER ZEBRA!!!

  • @FindTheFun
    @FindTheFun Před 2 měsíci +2

    Local optima is actually a great way to think about addictions. It's difficult to quit your addictions because you have to go down a lesser peak to find you pathway to a higher one.

  • @maxwoo9695
    @maxwoo9695 Před 2 lety +1984

    "thats why its impossible"
    200000 years later,
    Zebras: whanna bet

    • @electronx5594
      @electronx5594 Před 2 lety +45

      i doubt if its gonna still be a zebra

    • @rishikesh4117
      @rishikesh4117 Před 2 lety +34

      Possible but not inside 200k years
      Dont give that nuub in the first reply likes

    • @maxwoo9695
      @maxwoo9695 Před 2 lety +4

      @ً ruh roh reggy

    • @ph1l69
      @ph1l69 Před 2 lety +4

      Sans

    • @maxwoo9695
      @maxwoo9695 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ph1l69 ye

  • @andyt1313
    @andyt1313 Před 3 lety +606

    I read this somewhere. Evolution isn’t about the “best” or even the “good”, it’s about the “good enough”

    • @altrag
      @altrag Před 3 lety +23

      Sort of but not really. If say, zebras evolved lasers to fight off all their predators they would definitely be "good enough", but there would still be competition for mates and food and the like so the entire species as a whole would continue to get "better" even though all of the pressures are all internal. It would be a much, much slower evolution than would be produced by external pressures, but it would still happen.

    • @nate7LP_my_dog_found_the_knife
      @nate7LP_my_dog_found_the_knife Před 3 lety +37

      @@altrag maybe lions would evolve laser beams or ways to deflect the laser.

    • @menacetosociety9076
      @menacetosociety9076 Před 3 lety +57

      @@nate7LP_my_dog_found_the_knife mirror lions 😳

    • @vedantjain5853
      @vedantjain5853 Před 3 lety +8

      You probably heard it on CZcams as I did too recently but can’t remember from which video

    • @matheussanthiago9685
      @matheussanthiago9685 Před 3 lety +28

      evolution is the greatest C - student

  • @erivanjunior9368
    @erivanjunior9368 Před 10 měsíci

    I actually was about to comment about the mulefas. Glad to see the reference and they actually look even weirder than I had imagined when I read the books.

  • @DeFaulty101
    @DeFaulty101 Před 16 dny +1

    TL;DR, I explain how evolution could actually produce lazer zebras (2nd paragraph if low on time or patience).
    I can appreciate that answering all questions pertaining to the abilities of evolution with the appropriate degree of nuance is no small task. This is why I have always found it useful to employ what I call 'conjecturifics' or 'conjecturific language;' language denoting an appropriate degree of uncertainty, such as "perhaps" when you are giving one two possible explanations where you have no inclinations, "I suspect" when it is your prefered explanation but not by a wide margin, 'I am confident' when it *is* prefered by a wide margin (ideally for good reason), etc. You actually did a pretty decent job of this, but I have an objection.
    When discussing the 'zebras acquiring lazer weapons' being impossible because of the transitionary stages being less fit, you assume the only path is one where components of the weapon would be acquired one at a time, and the weapon would only be useful upon completion. In reality, this is not the only path. There is the evolutionary path taken, for example, by the camera / eye. The eye started as a bit of light-sensitive brain tissue. This enabled early acquatic animals to determine when a predator was approaching, because a small amount of light was penetrating their outer layers - just as we can still see some of the light when we cover a flashlight with our hands - and this light was now being obscured. Over time, the tissue covering this light sensitive brain-matter was lost, leaving these early eyes exposed. Over time, that brain tissue specialized for photon detection exclusively. Over time, eyes changed shape into a chamber (from which the word "camera" is derrived) with a pinhole through which light from different point sources would be mapped to specific photon receptors. Over time, eyes developed shutters, or irises, to change the size of the pinhole, enabling animals to focus on things near or distant. Zebras could evolve bio-luminescence, as so many animals have, if their environment changed to grant them an advantage for doing so. This bioluminescence could evolve into stronger bursts of light if, for example, their environment consisted of a single source of nutrients which were stunned when struck with a burst of light. Competition between this predator zebra and this prey animal might result in the prey becoming resistant to increasingly strong bursts of light, and zebras producing increasingly powerful bursts of light. There. That is how evolution could actually produce lazer zebras. I very much doubt this will ever happen, but it is not 'impossible in evolution.'

  • @lluma8153
    @lluma8153 Před 3 lety +793

    Looks at thumbnail
    “Hey Ferb, I know what we’re going to do today!”

  • @nobody5093
    @nobody5093 Před 3 lety +1137

    when people say they want wings, i don't think anyone is thinking about turning their arms in to wings but having wings come out of their back.

    • @SunniMerlot
      @SunniMerlot Před 3 lety +171

      Exactly. Angel style

    • @notmyopinion4981
      @notmyopinion4981 Před 3 lety +174

      i wish we could engineer those, but they apparently have to be huge, to support us and their own weight, cuz they also will be heavy, since we don't have much materials that are light enough and also efficient... so yeah... kinda a bummer

    • @nettewilson853
      @nettewilson853 Před 3 lety +8

      Yes

    • @nettewilson853
      @nettewilson853 Před 3 lety +44

      @@notmyopinion4981 but we could be smaller and have lighter bones maybe???

    • @rymontgomery7546
      @rymontgomery7546 Před 3 lety +8

      Seems even less likely

  • @subscribetovadorcreations
    @subscribetovadorcreations Před 4 měsíci +5

    i'll prove every single of these wrong by evolving them on me

  • @colpul2103
    @colpul2103 Před dnem +1

    Talk to me in 50-100 years when we get this CRISPR thing fully sorted. Wings we will have.

  • @Petteri82
    @Petteri82 Před 3 lety +960

    Fun fact: Even if you are in bad shape or perhaps overweight, you are automatically one of the best long distance runners on the planet. Unless you aren't human, in which case your reading this is impressive.

    • @somestranger175
      @somestranger175 Před 3 lety +77

      I'd disagree. A 350 pound fatball can't walk 50 feet, let alone a mile or so. The human respiratory system is pathetic, it can't support weight. I'm ~185lbs at 5'8 and I can't run at maximum speed for more than 0.5 mile

    • @reubensenft1522
      @reubensenft1522 Před 3 lety +257

      @@somestranger175 long distance runner, not long distance sprinter

    • @MannIchFindKeinName
      @MannIchFindKeinName Před 3 lety +46

      @@somestranger175 Sorry, but i disagree based on facts.
      edition.cnn.com/2017/05/05/health/turning-points-mirna-valerio/index.html
      Its just one example, didnt find my original example, but there are plenty of indigenous runners that are fat for western standards, doing more kilometers a day than i move with bus in a whole week (jeah, work is pretty close

    • @georgedunn320
      @georgedunn320 Před 3 lety +66

      Good points all. Perhaps the image of a sumotori keeping up with a pronghorn is a bit ludicrous. It might be better to express "long distance runner" as "endurance predator."
      Though most quadripeds would leave humans in the dust in short races, our ancestors excelled in chases lasting several days, our only real challengers being the canids, particularly _lupus_ and _lycaon._
      Upright bipedality means more of the musculature can be devoted to mobility as gravity is resisted by the bones; naked skin provided superior thermoregulation in hot climates; an omnivorous diet meant no need to spend hours browsing or grazing to restore energy and those peculiar primate feet (once well-toughened) could tackle a wide variety of terrain.

    • @reiverdaemon
      @reiverdaemon Před 3 lety +60

      @@somestranger175 Olympic level sprinters can't even maintain top speed in the 100m.
      Humans are about efficiency(endurance) not raw speed or strength.

  • @brian576
    @brian576 Před 3 lety +1001

    Very disappointing, they totally missed out on "sharks with frickin laser beams on their heads"

    • @besmart
      @besmart  Před 3 lety +556

      Geneva Conventions forbid it

    • @ReprucssionsForever
      @ReprucssionsForever Před 3 lety +81

      @@besmart Mutate the gene in Geneva convention to GENE-VA-riation Convention....and give us the damn psychedelic octopus.......

    • @saturnianrings3920
      @saturnianrings3920 Před 3 lety +27

      Get filthy rich. Get a team of Scientist to go wild with CRISPR and your in business.

    • @DneilB007
      @DneilB007 Před 3 lety +23

      @@ReprucssionsForever No, not *that* Geneva Convention. Joe means the 1952 Geneva Copyright Convention. Dr. Evil Jr would demonetize the video.

    • @daisybuchanan8205
      @daisybuchanan8205 Před 3 lety +3

      Dr Evil hhhhhhh

  • @dasstigma
    @dasstigma Před 9 měsíci +2

    5:36
    I need this as a poster!

  • @5driedgrams
    @5driedgrams Před 3 měsíci +1

    4:40
    "please leave"
    lol this is gold

  • @danieljensen2626
    @danieljensen2626 Před 3 lety +235

    Zebras could use a small glowing red spot to attract mates, then use a low wattage laser to distract lions (think laser pointer and cat), and then eventually power up the laser into a defensive weapon.

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin Před 3 lety +31

      Now I really want to see the biological mechanism of a laser. I can almost imagine it right now. Energy storage and discharge like an electric eel, transparent structures abound, add in some bioluminescence and all it needs is cohesiveness light, which I'm sure evolution could figure out.

    • @michaelprice3031
      @michaelprice3031 Před 3 lety +21

      They'd have to eat a lot though to maintain enough energy to operate it. Perhaps they would develop biological solar panels too?

    • @kindlin
      @kindlin Před 3 lety +15

      @@michaelprice3031
      It could come slowly from your metabolism, or more quickly if light sensitive skin cells started charging up those eel-like batteries.

    • @qwertyasdf9290
      @qwertyasdf9290 Před 3 lety +15

      @@michaelprice3031 green zebras with chlorophyll

    • @rhiannanmcdermott6631
      @rhiannanmcdermott6631 Před 3 lety

      @@kindlin bn43 ^ 7

  • @matthewtheobald1231
    @matthewtheobald1231 Před 2 lety +550

    "Survival of the Fittest" should be renamed to "Survival of the Good Enough"

  • @critic9
    @critic9 Před 9 měsíci +1

    So this is how evo firecracker came out 👏 👏 I now know that goblins will soon start shooting lasers

    • @PokemonJacob-vi2li
      @PokemonJacob-vi2li Před 3 měsíci

      What kind of clash Royale nerf miner-esque meme comment is this?

  • @granolakitti8521
    @granolakitti8521 Před rokem +37

    With the same logic that rattet snakes "rattle parts" work, animals should be able to grow wheels. And if muscles, or other movable tissue, os correctly positioned inside they would be able to roll

    • @adissentingopinion848
      @adissentingopinion848 Před rokem +9

      Yeah, but the snake could get more effective with but a single grain of substance rattling in their tail. At least it wouldn't hurt, and it is ultimately not vital to survival. If you're gonna roll with wheels they have to be complete and be repairable from damage. The bones in our legs can mend themselves because they're surrounded with static flesh and tons of blood.

    • @Ant3rn
      @Ant3rn Před rokem +3

      @@adissentingopinion848evolution is ok with non-repairable parts. What’s about teeth or limbs? A lion without teeth is pretty dead in wild. I would say wheels are not effective enough without roads ( durability, flexibility, speed ) to compete with good old legs.

    • @SwordFastic
      @SwordFastic Před rokem +1

      how will they move the wheels?

    • @Ant3rn
      @Ant3rn Před rokem +1

      @@SwordFastic any way. Pushing, like on wheelchair, more close to a steam train. It’s no more complicated than our eye or brain.

    • @LineOfThy
      @LineOfThy Před rokem +1

      @@SwordFastic pushing with other limbs

  • @sagealyxander
    @sagealyxander Před 3 lety +993

    i have a bachelors degree in biology and I was never taught about that "can only go uphill" thing in my four frickin years. thanks IOTBS lol

    • @thomasw4422
      @thomasw4422 Před 3 lety +94

      We learnt about that while studying genetic/evolution based optimisation algorithms. If you up the mutation rate to very high levels, you can sorta. But you also risk losing any advantages. It's like the chance of superpowers vs cancer.

    • @Tyronejizz
      @Tyronejizz Před 3 lety +11

      Why is someone with a bachelor degree in bilogy watching a kids show?

    • @jacobrutzke691
      @jacobrutzke691 Před 3 lety +130

      @@Tyronejizz because its interesting and people like learning new things

    • @Tyronejizz
      @Tyronejizz Před 3 lety +4

      @@jacobrutzke691 if he has a bachlor in biology he should already know why you can't evolve wings.

    • @jacobrutzke691
      @jacobrutzke691 Před 3 lety +78

      @@Tyronejizz so you can always learn new things and some times it's just fun to listen to something in the background

  • @abnorman541
    @abnorman541 Před 3 lety +211

    I, for one, welcome our new evolutionary superior Laser Zebra overlords.

    • @davegoldspink5354
      @davegoldspink5354 Před 3 lety +3

      😂🤣😂👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

    • @emmagoff
      @emmagoff Před 3 lety +4

      Better that Boris!

    • @Chimailai
      @Chimailai Před 3 lety +2

      @@emmagoff why do you have to get political?

    • @emmagoff
      @emmagoff Před 3 lety +2

      @@Chimailai it was just a comment made in humour, as was the comment I replied to. Don't let yourself get offended because none was meant 🙏

    • @darthjarjarbinkstherealsit6832
      @darthjarjarbinkstherealsit6832 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes.

  • @jinhuaofficial1608
    @jinhuaofficial1608 Před rokem +5

    The thumbnail got me lmao now I am here but this was an enjoyable video

  • @livingcorpse5664
    @livingcorpse5664 Před 9 měsíci +17

    No energy weapon evolution like lasers.
    Electric Eels: Am I joke to you?

    • @Tophat-Turtle
      @Tophat-Turtle Před 9 měsíci +2

      That's electricity my guy, that's quite normal in the animal kingdom

    • @livingcorpse5664
      @livingcorpse5664 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@Tophat-Turtle Woosh.

  • @StopChangingUsernamesYouTube

    Let's just stare at bacterial flagella for a few hours and appreciate the one biological motor that does exist.

    • @DoofusSupreme
      @DoofusSupreme Před 3 lety +10

      Maybe the one biological rotor? But I feel like you could call any muscle a biological motor, in a way. They just don't create rotational motion

    • @zethwanner6755
      @zethwanner6755 Před 3 lety +18

      @@DoofusSupreme muscles are pistons

    • @DoofusSupreme
      @DoofusSupreme Před 3 lety +3

      @@zethwanner6755 true

    • @joshualuntsford
      @joshualuntsford Před 3 lety +8

      Lol. My wife works for a lab in Colorado. She’s a lab scientist and she talks about bacterial flagella almost everyday. I have no idea wha she’s talking about

    • @patrickhowden1601
      @patrickhowden1601 Před 3 lety

      Smart comment. This yt guy “Its ok to be smart” LoL, doesn’t know about the flagella, otherwise he would have mentioned it. But then he would have to explain how it came about, and I don’t think he’s so smart that he could do that.

  • @asandax6
    @asandax6 Před 3 lety +536

    Humans: Why hasn't evolution made zebras with Lasers.
    Evolution: You idiot I evolved you so you can make those things, Have you forgotten You are part of me?

    • @pomtubes1205
      @pomtubes1205 Před 3 lety +25

      Wait, so evolution is god now? How the turn tables.

    • @gamingcreatesworlddd2425
      @gamingcreatesworlddd2425 Před 3 lety +17

      @@pomtubes1205 evolution is adaptation generation after generation for many years

    • @pomtubes1205
      @pomtubes1205 Před 3 lety +11

      @@gamingcreatesworlddd2425 I believe the earth is a cube. I don't comprehend.

    • @pomtubes1205
      @pomtubes1205 Před 3 lety +18

      @Sir Slimy No... how can it be a donut if you can't eat it?

    • @YokoX23
      @YokoX23 Před 3 lety +21

      @@pomtubes1205 actually you can eat it, just not the whole thing.... And it's better to eat the junk growing on the surface.

  • @mihai5711
    @mihai5711 Před 3 dny +1

    I never thought I would learn evolutionary biology from William Defoe !

  • @lotfi2631
    @lotfi2631 Před 11 měsíci +2

    My very first look at this channel and i'm welcome with "why tigers don't have wheels and lasers" followed by "it's okay to be smart"
    Grandpa once told that smart people will never say that they're smart , he'll always be right

    • @eddyyt7466
      @eddyyt7466 Před 11 měsíci

      Your English is slightly broken and I can’t understand what you mean by this comment

  • @ninjaslash52_98
    @ninjaslash52_98 Před rokem +590

    I think the flying fish is one such example of evolution taking it up a notch

  • @ClemensAlive
    @ClemensAlive Před 3 lety +2038

    Ok, so why is my body evolving a fat belly for me?
    That's clearly a loss in fitness. :(

    • @bencui1045
      @bencui1045 Před 3 lety +175

      Because evolution didn’t account for excess food. Weight loss programs or just living with some belly fat are deemed “good enough” for humans to survive.

    • @zukodude487987
      @zukodude487987 Před 3 lety +138

      We evolved in a food scarce environment and we have only had an abundance of food for the last 100 years so we have not had enough time to adapt to this new age of abundance.

    • @jarzez
      @jarzez Před 3 lety +77

      @@zukodude487987 An important thing to note here is that we most likely never will adapt to it either. At least not naturally.
      Basically we have created a society which doesn't actually require the human race's fitness to increase. The trend would logically even be the opposite, a decrease instead. Because in the society we have created normally the "lower class" births a lot more children than the more successful "upper class" families. Therefore over time increasing the prevalence of genes that actually don't "succeed" as well in our society (career wise and such).

    • @pcmasterracetechgod5660
      @pcmasterracetechgod5660 Před 3 lety +17

      @@jarzez There is no need to adapt, if people used their brains that we've evolved so much, they wouldn't become obese and would work out, be healthy, and live longer lives. We already have evolved in terms of nutrition, it's people's own will and decisions that leads to obesity, not a flaw in evolution

    • @jarzez
      @jarzez Před 3 lety +20

      @@pcmasterracetechgod5660 Well, I dont necessarily disagree with you that people are overall not thinking about the health consequences enough. But you can easily argue that it is our current state of evolution that causes the majority of population to live unhealthy lives and make unhealthy decision.
      It's not like evolution and our decisions are unrelated, quite the opposite. Our brain is simply not evolved to naturally make healthy life choices in our current society. If it was, then we wouldnt have obesity for example.

  • @bhavyagupta8195
    @bhavyagupta8195 Před 11 měsíci

    Wow!
    I didn't expected reference to "his dark material" here!

  • @brandonshelp4682
    @brandonshelp4682 Před 9 měsíci +5

    This is super fun, because I'm trying to mentally justify how these things could evolve 😂

  • @comedyfriendsenglish
    @comedyfriendsenglish Před 3 lety +302

    Dodos going extinct is the top 1 saddest death in anime

  • @robhacklblumstein
    @robhacklblumstein Před 3 lety +209

    "Why are there no giraffe-sized chickens?"
    Before about 66 million years ago, there were.

  • @Miracle12348
    @Miracle12348 Před 5 dny +1

    I literally fell asleep while watching this video. I don’t know if that’s a good thing or a bad thing.

  • @sarenarterius6217
    @sarenarterius6217 Před 7 měsíci +2

    What is impossible in evolution?
    Nothing. You only need the correct evolution stone and a couple of good TM's.

  • @heronb.4965
    @heronb.4965 Před 3 lety +247

    I swear the moment you said "aren't dolphins three-limbed animals?" my brain broke

    • @pseudodao7040
      @pseudodao7040 Před 3 lety +42

      If you inhale glue before bed, your brain will seal back while you sleep.

    • @stefansauvageonwhat-a-twis1369
      @stefansauvageonwhat-a-twis1369 Před 3 lety +7

      Some have 5!

    • @MarlowPreston
      @MarlowPreston Před 3 lety +14

      @@pseudodao7040 Warning, side effects may include but are not limited to, clogged sinuses, coughing, difficulty breathing, and death.

    • @pseudodao7040
      @pseudodao7040 Před 3 lety +4

      @@MarlowPreston so inhaling glue leads to covid? Whaaaat?

    • @Kurayamiblack
      @Kurayamiblack Před 3 lety +4

      @@pseudodao7040 So that's what China was doing... No wonder they tried to hide it, that's embarrassing

  • @TheAutobotPower
    @TheAutobotPower Před 3 lety +382

    *Fish with propellers is impossible*
    200 millions years in the future: Flish.

    • @NurseSnow2U
      @NurseSnow2U Před 3 lety +10

      Hmm...is your username coincidental?! Tell us what you know!!! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @BJCMXY
      @BJCMXY Před 3 lety +7

      Those are fish with wings...entirely different dynamic... "The Future is Wild" was a fun thought experiment.

    • @BJCMXY
      @BJCMXY Před 3 lety +1

      @@greenxmango8049 Technically they already exist, but they lack the genetic mutation accumulations to become what is outlined in that short series... also, if you're logging into things with the same email on multiple services, & don't have privacy settings that tell the various data loggers to ignore you, then obviously you're going to find a lot more "coincidental" things as it's financially appealing to those that employ the data loggers, since they get rewarded for snooping & suggesting.
      I know Firefox isn't the best browser out there in terms of resource management, but it certainly does a decent job of blocking those data loggers when surfing the internet.
      For the apps that you use, many have an opt-out section.

    • @korniminorni780
      @korniminorni780 Před 3 lety

      actually laughed out loud

    • @Usual_User
      @Usual_User Před 3 lety +1

      Oh yes, of course.. the FLISH

  • @LineOfThy
    @LineOfThy Před rokem

    mulefa are probably my favorite part of His Dark Materials. They look so different from us yet they blend so naturally.

  • @Ryanowning
    @Ryanowning Před 3 měsíci +1

    As a Sci-Fi writer, I feel that this video is an attack on me personally.

  • @MidnightSt
    @MidnightSt Před 3 lety +333

    People for evolution of human wings: give evolution a reason; Make floor actual lava!

    • @sumreensultana1860
      @sumreensultana1860 Před 3 lety +11

      Or just Code it into our DNA

    • @Eldritch-1
      @Eldritch-1 Před 3 lety +9

      @@sumreensultana1860 Crispr-9 is going to make it possible.. soon, all the old fools need to go die off first though.

    • @xRakanishu
      @xRakanishu Před 3 lety +18

      Then everyone dies because that's not how evolution works

    • @The_Blue_Otaku
      @The_Blue_Otaku Před 3 lety +9

      imagen if the next stage of humans evolved with monkey tails... what I'm just Saiyan ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @cerobalam
      @cerobalam Před 3 lety +1

      Or make a vehicle to counter lava.

  • @GroundThing
    @GroundThing Před 3 lety +188

    "Are snakes one limbed animals?" Please no. I didn't want to think about that today, and now I can't get it out of my head.

    • @keithfaulkner6319
      @keithfaulkner6319 Před 3 lety +19

      Boas, pythons, and pipe snakes have rear limbs. They're just tiny, but they're there.

    • @KryssLaBryn
      @KryssLaBryn Před 3 lety +7

      it's okay; tails aren't *limbs* (even when they're used for propulsion); they're mobile extensions of the spine.

    • @khumokwezimashapa2245
      @khumokwezimashapa2245 Před 3 lety +7

      The snakes are the limbs

    • @skknireeker9073
      @skknireeker9073 Před 3 lety +2

      Is a head a limb? No snakes have no limbs, just body/torso and head

    • @GradientExe
      @GradientExe Před 3 lety +2

      take five snakes and put them together
      now you have the snake king

  • @FindTheFun
    @FindTheFun Před 2 měsíci +1

    Just for fun, we can pretend it might be possible for two DIFFERENT organisms to evolve together into one structure where one is the wheel and the other is the driving body. Lichen and Siphonophores are examples of two organisms forming together to created a shared structural body.

  • @lookdadnomilk
    @lookdadnomilk Před 2 měsíci +1

    "why do no animals have wheels?" in this economy bro, even most humans cant afford them

  • @dougthedonkey1805
    @dougthedonkey1805 Před 3 lety +228

    “You can’t evolve anything that reduces your fitness”
    Babirusa: hold my beer

    • @MrIrrationalSmith
      @MrIrrationalSmith Před 3 lety +28

      Type 1 diabetes: hold my insulin

    • @gorilladisco9108
      @gorilladisco9108 Před 3 lety +30

      The fitness theory is flawed.
      Evolution is about ability to survive, not ability to excel. As long as a mutation does not kill before the mutant can breed, the evolution happens.
      Your babirusa example is one that refute that theory. Another example is the sickle cell mutation in Sub Saharan people. Both made the mutants less fit.

    • @dougthedonkey1805
      @dougthedonkey1805 Před 3 lety +60

      @@gorilladisco9108 the sickle cell mutation is actually to combat malaria. As a recessive gene, it offers protection at the risk of your children possibly dying if your partner has the gene as well. Instead of nearly 100% of your children dying from malaria, about 25% will have both genes and die, about 50% will have one out of two and be malaria-resistant while also not displaying sickle cell anemia, and about 25% will not have any anemia genes and will likely die of malaria. I’m sure there’s more at play than just the Eighth Grade Punnet Square™, but this is a simplified version of what happens that gets the point across well enough

    • @gorilladisco9108
      @gorilladisco9108 Před 3 lety

      @@dougthedonkey1805 It indeed made the mutant less fit than the normal version of the species.

    • @dougthedonkey1805
      @dougthedonkey1805 Před 3 lety +25

      @@gorilladisco9108 did you read what I said?

  • @RocketJo86
    @RocketJo86 Před 2 lety +291

    You totally forgot to mention one curcially important thing on fitness: Fitness isn't determined by your survival rate, but by your reproduction. So going for something like Laser Zebras, it would be possible that a Zebra lives long enough to mate and give birth with a specific trait that may or may not lead to a laser organ in the long term. As long as their offspring can succsessfully mate and give birth again, the trait can be spread, solidified and further evolve over time. That's basically the reason, why hammer toes (hallux valgus) exist in humans or why we haven't outbred cancer or chorea huntington. The genes that lead to those phenotypes do so a bit after our reproduction age. People with the genetic dispositon for cancer or chorea huntington, f.e., can successfully produce offspring, as the "diseases" occur in their higher years (mid-thirties onwards). Hallux Valgus, with is a condition in which your biggest toe moves inward in a painful process, which may leave you unable to walk, if not treated, begins mostly after the menopause (or around the same time in men, but I think it's more common in women, correct me, if I'm wrong). But the trait can pass on and actually is about to solidify in certain lineages, as it doesn't lower your reproduction rate. And in this case, one offspring (or a set of non-phenotypically coding genes or a heterozygotous inheritance like albinism f.e.) is all evolution needs in the long run.
    Strange hands, which can become wings, however, won't necessarily lower your survival rate (as humans tend to keep those alive, who are close to them. Especially when they are helpful in other ways), but I can guess it would lower their reproduction rate, because how many people would mate with someone with bat-hands?
    Or as my biology professor once put it: Humans love strawberries. If there where one person to have strawberry-shaped, -colored and -tasting ears, it would have major sucess finding mates. So there would be some children with strawberry-ears, who in turn would have big success in finding mates and some generations onward, strawberry-ears would be a perfectly normal trait in humans. Evolution isn't logical, it isn't goal-oriented, but pretty situational and sometimes astonishingly complex.

    • @npc4416
      @npc4416 Před rokem +10

      good point but sadly only a few will read this 😔

    • @spicemelange8895
      @spicemelange8895 Před rokem +3

      Yess, thank you for pointing this out bc it's a crucial factor in the development of wings. Not many ppl would be excited to mate with someone who has an early phenotype for batwings, regardless of how cool the concept that their great grand kids might be able to fly. Unfortunately (or fortunately depending on your perspective) higher degrees of consciousness gets in the way of the evolutionary process when it comes to selective breeding. Granted, many animals out there share our disposition against mating with others who look very different than us species wise but I get the strong impression that such hesitance is exacerbated the more sentient and self aware you become. Especially once you factor In human notions of traditionalism/ religion that would make such action a social taboo

    • @jclive2860
      @jclive2860 Před rokem +2

      Yep, being able to reproduce the most means that you’re the fittest. That’s literally what survival of the fittest means in biology. Im ashamed many people think it means the animal is simply the strongest or the smartest.

    • @shientioh4865
      @shientioh4865 Před rokem

      So what your saying is that we need to make cancer happen earlier to phase it out of our dna

    • @LoverboyTousey
      @LoverboyTousey Před rokem +1

      No sex for plebs!!!!

  • @alexmoon273
    @alexmoon273 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I feel like this is different for us because we get to decide to a large extent which traits get passed on due to most people being able to reproduce regardless of potential harmful traits. Hell we literally did it with dogs, food, bacteria, etc.

  • @Rupert3434
    @Rupert3434 Před 14 dny

    Thank you for remembering the mulefa.

  • @transientaardvark6231
    @transientaardvark6231 Před rokem +171

    Another factor you didn't mention is "brittleness" (I think a term coined by Dawkins) - your hands and my hands are not exactly the same shape, but we both have hands that are ok as hands. A wheel cannot get very far from being perfectly circular before it is essentially useless - my collection of slightly warped bike wheels attests to that. So quite apart from the issue of damage-in-use, the peak that they sit on in evolutionary space has almost vertical sides - too steep to plausibly climb. All that said, there are microbes that use what may be called wheels or propellers, because the physics at small scale gives evolution a slightly different landscape to play on.

    • @castonyoung7514
      @castonyoung7514 Před 6 měsíci

      Everything you just said is made up. Never tested by any experiment, just like most evolutionary theories.
      I guess you're going to make me get into all the ways the virtual simulations are useless now huh. Well, long story short by the time computers came around everybody had already made up their mind when it came to whether or not evolution was true. The only experiments that evolutionists cared about, were done to test whether or not computers could be used to simulate evolution, which they can (although I think the first study/studies actually failed). However, cartoon physics can also be simulated on a computer, it means nothing. Most evolution simulations that are made, simply aren't even considered finished until they simulate evolution. Ergo it's impossible that one could be used to determine that evolution is impossible since all of the problems have either been lessened or stripped away (for instance, by making every possible piece of genetic code equate to a functional neural network wherein only one or two triggers are needed to survive).
      I've wanted to make my own evolution simulator to actually test whether or not evolution is possible for a long time, unfortunately, it's one of those projects that appears to be too hard to ever get around to.

  • @miss-jerk175
    @miss-jerk175 Před 2 lety +1367

    You know I've never thought about human made technology like cars or wheels being under evolutionary pressure before, but that's totally what happens huh? It's why we don't use flip phones or beepers anymore, they were out competed by smart phones. It's a pretty interesting way to think about it

    • @orinblank2056
      @orinblank2056 Před 2 lety +56

      Yeah the market is subject to similar pressures as life is

    • @danan9061
      @danan9061 Před 2 lety +16

      Well flip phone is back because we realized it was actually awesome and now iys better since its also a smartphone

    • @SlyNine
      @SlyNine Před rokem +5

      Not exactly. They don't replicate, so in this context it wouldn't make sense.

    • @mohammadsaleh1998
      @mohammadsaleh1998 Před rokem +7

      @@SlyNine yeah but they can be replcated

    • @lucyandecember2843
      @lucyandecember2843 Před rokem +1

      o.o

  • @shirok6738
    @shirok6738 Před měsícem +1

    Another perspective to look at this. Evolution already has evolved and created things that we are likely to imagine. Evolution evolved us into an intellectually strong animal and we have created anything and everything we think is doable. I give the entire credit to evolution.

  • @brendandarcy8188
    @brendandarcy8188 Před 3 měsíci

    Evolution is so crazy until you realise it's just learning in the physical form. 🤯

  • @ryokajimosensei2780
    @ryokajimosensei2780 Před 3 lety +101

    Still waiting for a legit dragon to evolve itself to reality

    • @yachiyous9110
      @yachiyous9110 Před 3 lety +23

      I'd say a flying reptile would be a good start, just add some snout, make it stand a bit upright and increase the size. Maybe add a skunk or bombardier beetle defense mechanism on its mouth for the fire breathing effect

    • @jackmcavaney6565
      @jackmcavaney6565 Před 3 lety +9

      Aye yo we got draco lizards look them up they are sick as hell the lil homies got wings

    • @NurseSnow2U
      @NurseSnow2U Před 3 lety +5

      @@jackmcavaney6565 they do be having wings though. But their size makes them sort of adorable. Multiply that by like x100 and shits gonna get really real, really fast 🤣

    • @maxthexpfarmer3957
      @maxthexpfarmer3957 Před 3 lety +1

      It's very difficult for a genuinely large and strong animal to fly.

    • @rasmuswi
      @rasmuswi Před 3 lety +2

      @@yachiyous9110 I'd say one of the real obstacles for true fire-breathing would be producing some adequate amounts of some combustible substance. Not impossible, but it would require lots of energy, so the animal would have to eat LOTS of food. That fire would basically have to help the animal to find lots of food to be viable.

  • @matias6449
    @matias6449 Před 3 lety +90

    "plant eating snakes" I thought he was talking about plants that eat snakes lol. that would be dope

    • @rolfs2165
      @rolfs2165 Před 3 lety +14

      Pitcher plants can do that - if a snake happens to fall into them.

    • @Xelaria
      @Xelaria Před 3 lety +2

      The plant would not be a vegetarian then.

    • @MrKfleong
      @MrKfleong Před 3 lety +3

      @@Xelaria and there is some plants that are carnivorous, thank evolution

    • @gabor6259
      @gabor6259 Před 3 lety

      Venus flytrap.

    • @misterskeleton_yt7854
      @misterskeleton_yt7854 Před 3 lety

      @@gabor6259 a native organism of venus

  • @devilsstrikegaming8695
    @devilsstrikegaming8695 Před 3 měsíci +1

    1. Evolution can definitely give wings if mutation happen, it will surely be of membrane than feathers.
    2. Evolution can also make fish propellors but it will likely be a muscular than of metal.
    3. Evolution can definitely make 5 legged cat through mutation.
    4. Giraffes size chicken is really possible, U already know them as Non avian Dinosaurs.
    5. Wheel is possible in evolution but it will most likely be made of Keratin than living cells.
    6. Zebra with lazers is possible in evolution as we all know luminosity is possible biologically cause we already have fireflies, but fighting lazers r not possible which includes very very high amount of metabolic rate.

  • @poopyfart89
    @poopyfart89 Před 9 měsíci +5

    there WERE giraffe sized chickens. they were called dinosaurs

  • @faesommers
    @faesommers Před 3 lety +221

    the phrase “forbidden phenotypes” is just so funny to me

    • @Malaima
      @Malaima Před 3 lety +10

      it is! it is like forbidden pleasures but in a deliciously quirky because naughty-intelligent way!

    • @smaakjeks
      @smaakjeks Před 3 lety +3

      Sounds like a prog rock band

    • @yoboijerry5519
      @yoboijerry5519 Před 3 lety

      Most of this vid is fake Christ is the answer, if there was evaluation how come there are still monkeys

    • @smaakjeks
      @smaakjeks Před 3 lety +6

      @@yoboijerry5519 If Americans descended from British colonists, how come there are still British people?

    • @SuperDUD66
      @SuperDUD66 Před 3 lety

      Sounds like the overpowered skins all of the anime cast is aiming for.

  • @stefanospinelli9636
    @stefanospinelli9636 Před 3 lety +131

    Me and my homies: "why animals have no wheels???"
    The smart guy: "well, to start you should know that in Mesopotamia they used to have chariots..."

  • @lukewillett1151
    @lukewillett1151 Před 19 dny

    "Absolute unit" to describe the alien elephant is so funny

  • @clemensbock7434
    @clemensbock7434 Před 9 měsíci +2

    As a German I am quite happy the Trabbi was featured!

  • @xen32
    @xen32 Před 3 lety +141

    "Hey smart people, Joe here" - JOE I NEED THIS PLEASE

  • @akashselvam
    @akashselvam Před 3 lety +67

    This video unironically helped me with my self-esteem

  • @Wix_Mitwirth
    @Wix_Mitwirth Před rokem +3

    In your examples of odd-numbered limbed animals the extra is the tail. Is a tail a limb? It's part of the spine, the trunk, not a branch off of the trunk. Since it's usually added on beyond the pelvis I suppose it still counts as an appendage. What's the name of that thing on the top of corn stalks?

  • @applechomper6514
    @applechomper6514 Před 2 měsíci

    Crazy how new studies are saying that the limitation for land animals might actually be a lot higher than previously thought

  • @catoninetales
    @catoninetales Před 3 lety +237

    Alternate title: Why there are no real-life pokemon.
    WHERE'S MY POKEMON, EVOLUTION???

    • @abugonapugonamugonarug1653
      @abugonapugonamugonarug1653 Před 3 lety +5

      Would you rather be a Pokémon master or the King/Queen of the Earth

    • @mr.penguin8301
      @mr.penguin8301 Před 3 lety +5

      @@abugonapugonamugonarug1653 Pojemon master so I could become king of the earth... because I'd be the only one alive.

    • @isaz2425
      @isaz2425 Před 2 lety +7

      they exist, they are called animals. But we're just missing the pokeballs.

    • @mr.penguin8301
      @mr.penguin8301 Před 2 lety +3

      @@isaz2425 You know, we can just tame animals so the need for Pokeballs is unexistant, although the risk is considerably higher.

    • @isaz2425
      @isaz2425 Před 2 lety

      @@mr.penguin8301 true, but it's much less cool without the pokeballs.

  • @dermenschistweilesglaubtda41

    we just need to keep playing "the floor is lava" this will be the selection pressure that we have to adapt to AND WE WILL FLY

    • @zerospeed1498
      @zerospeed1498 Před 3 lety +7

      @Smit Shilpatul facts

    • @bronbust4797
      @bronbust4797 Před 3 lety +9

      We can just make a competitive sport for flying and only the hindret best people are allowed to mate. Just making evolution artificial.

    • @sapateirovalentin348
      @sapateirovalentin348 Před 3 lety

      YAYYY EUGENISM ! WOOOOOOO!!!

    • @Vi-pv3xi
      @Vi-pv3xi Před 3 lety +7

      There is something called genetic engineering. It is much faster than evolution or artificial selection. Maybe we can reduce the density of human bones and reduce or eliminate fat tissue so that humans weight is decreased. And also maybe we can strengthen our chest muscle through genetic engineering. And then we don't need to genetic engineer the wings. Just put artificial wings on and then you are ready to fly. But remember kids the answer to "Is this ethical?" is "Yes".

    • @JustAlex96
      @JustAlex96 Před 3 lety

      We would just go back to regular ole monkeys who are very good at climbing things :(

  • @DeadEndFrog
    @DeadEndFrog Před rokem +2

    The best way to win a Guinness world record is to create your own category

  • @marina4026
    @marina4026 Před 2 měsíci

    When I read the title, I first thought of energy balance in nature, overpowered animals would require other overpowered animals to feed, and this on a larger scale meant much more energy circulating on nature than we have today, making life unsustainable. Probably relates to the square cube theory, but I didn't understand that really well!

  • @denaamisdaan
    @denaamisdaan Před 3 lety +203

    In Dutch we don’t say ‘Roly poly’, we say ‘Piss beds’ and I think that’s beautiful ❤️

    • @JVJF7
      @JVJF7 Před 3 lety +8

      Pissy beds*

    • @panhandlesomen
      @panhandlesomen Před 3 lety +2

      Still bruh moment

    • @NurseSnow2U
      @NurseSnow2U Před 3 lety +1

      Yikes on bikes I love it.

    • @daviddavids2884
      @daviddavids2884 Před 3 lety +6

      in american, i grew up calling them potato bugs (which is not, what a lot of other folks would call a potato bug; then, pill bug. now, wood louse. googletranslate

    • @reeyy0909
      @reeyy0909 Před 3 lety +3

      P i s s b e d

  • @gljames24
    @gljames24 Před 2 lety +159

    Actually, from what I've heard, they've found out our eyes actually benefit from the nerves routing backwards. There are fiberoptic like filaments that filter out a lot of the blue light that tends to dominate on the land. In the ocean you don't want to reduce the amount light because you take all you can get.

  • @opm8191
    @opm8191 Před 3 měsíci

    I almost stopped watching because of the absurd laser zebras ... but didn't and don't regret it. Was extremly interesing and informative, especially the explanation of the fitness landscape. Thanks!