The human common ancestor lived much more recently than our split with other species, and evolution is very slow, so from first principles we should expect little genetic divergence among human populations.
→→[insert thousands of arrows here]→→
https://scholar.harvard.edu/jtennessen/emojiguide/chapter1 …
-
-
Prikaži ovu nit
-
In fact, human biodiversity is unusually low compared to diversity in most other species. While we can identify genetically distinct human populations with statistics, the differences are small.













<
https://scholar.harvard.edu/jtennessen/emojiguide/chapter2 …Prikaži ovu nit -
Some genes do vary substantially between human populations, but individual genetic variants provide no compelling evidence for innate cognitive or temperamental differences. Predicting traits from
:
= easy
= easy
= hardhttps://scholar.harvard.edu/jtennessen/emojiguide/chapter3 …Prikaži ovu nit -
Even the single most impactful genetic variant in humans (chromosome X vs Y) is not an insurmountable barrier to mental ability. For both race and gender, human differences seem more robust, innate, and meaningful than they really are.




https://scholar.harvard.edu/jtennessen/emojiguide/chapter4 …Prikaži ovu nit
Kraj razgovora
Novi razgovor -
Čini se da učitavanje traje već neko vrijeme.
Twitter je možda preopterećen ili ima kratkotrajnih poteškoća u radu. Pokušajte ponovno ili potražite dodatne informacije u odjeljku Status Twittera.