Difference between revisions of "Non-Darwinian Intraspecies Evolution"
(Imported from text file) |
(Imported from text file) |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
==Abstract== | ==Abstract== | ||
− | The 'genome organization' is not random but follows two guiding principles. The 'gene inclusion principle' decides on the inclusion of permanent genes, which determine and specify various species. These are the 'central' genes, which every one and all members of a species have in fixed positions unchangeably. According to the 'gene exclusion principle', however, no two of the billions of members of a species can have the same identical 'gene group' in the given position(s). The vestigial organs arose from the corresponding ''normal'' genetic expressions rather than from the lack of their use or utility. Man never had a tail and will never lose the unutilized pubic & axillary hairs because his genome so provides. The present man has not descended from the ape through Darwinian interspecies evolution but from primitive man himself through intraspecies evolution. | + | The 'genome organization' is not random but follows two guiding principles. The 'gene inclusion principle' decides on the inclusion of permanent genes, which determine and specify various species. These are the 'central' genes, which every one and all members of a species have in fixed positions unchangeably. According to the 'gene exclusion principle', however, no two of the billions of members of a species can have the same identical 'gene group' in the given position(s). The vestigial organs arose from the corresponding ''normal'' genetic expressions rather than from the lack of their use or utility. Man never had a tail and will never lose the unutilized pubic & axillary hairs because his genome so provides. The present man has not descended from the ape through Darwinian interspecies evolution but from primitive man himself through intraspecies evolution. |
− | [[Category:Unified Theory]] | + | [[Category:Scientific Paper|non-darwinian intraspecies evolution]] |
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Unified Theory|non-darwinian intraspecies evolution]] |
Latest revision as of 19:45, 1 January 2017
Scientific Paper | |
---|---|
Title | Non-Darwinian Intraspecies Evolution |
Read in full | Link to paper |
Author(s) | Rati Ram Sharma |
Keywords | Darwin, Non-Darwinian, Interspecies evolution, Intraspecies evolution, Ape |
Published | 2009 |
Journal | None |
No. of pages | 3 |
Read the full paper here
Abstract
The 'genome organization' is not random but follows two guiding principles. The 'gene inclusion principle' decides on the inclusion of permanent genes, which determine and specify various species. These are the 'central' genes, which every one and all members of a species have in fixed positions unchangeably. According to the 'gene exclusion principle', however, no two of the billions of members of a species can have the same identical 'gene group' in the given position(s). The vestigial organs arose from the corresponding normal genetic expressions rather than from the lack of their use or utility. Man never had a tail and will never lose the unutilized pubic & axillary hairs because his genome so provides. The present man has not descended from the ape through Darwinian interspecies evolution but from primitive man himself through intraspecies evolution.