Thread 936503357 - /b/ [Archived: 714 hours ago]

Anonymous
7/1/2025, 7:13:20 PM No.936503357
1734921483287661
1734921483287661
md5: 7141287b32cc4fbf4f7d8274572e4fa3🔍
.
Replies: >>936504401 >>936504795 >>936505058 >>936505740
Anonymous
7/1/2025, 7:47:05 PM No.936504401
>>936503357 (OP)
makes sense to me.
Anonymous
7/1/2025, 7:49:40 PM No.936504486
1751073205621522
1751073205621522
md5: e3f754d7857e391d78e224bfab5b5e19🔍
The real problem with divisions of species isn't that they are just guidelines, but that nobody can agree on the rules. Evolutionary biologists have proposed almost 30 different species definitions (called "species concepts") over the years, and none of them apply to all organisms. For example, the "no fertile offspring" definition is a paraphrase of one of the most popular species concepts called the Biological Species Concept (BSC), which actually states that a species is "a population or group of populations reproductively isolated from other such groups". "Reproductively isolated" in this case can mean "no fertile offspring", but it can also mean "they never encounter each other" or "they don't see each other as potential mates". The problems with the BSC are: 1. it doesn't work for organisms that reproduce asexually, 2. lots of organisms we would otherwise call different species have hybrids from time to time, and 3. reproductive isolation is actually really difficult to test (many organisms will hybridize in captivity but almost never in nature). As I said, there's like 30 more definitions of species that have been proposed, and most of them are slight modifications of other species concepts to fix problems with them (and introducing new problems lol). Some researchers have tried to come up with a definition that unifies all these different definitions (e.g. "a species is an independently-evolving metapopulation lineage"), but unified definitions fall apart because they're almost impossible to apply in the real world (how do you determine if something is "independently-evolving" or part of a metapopulation?).
Anonymous
7/1/2025, 7:59:58 PM No.936504795
>>936503357 (OP)
Has he finally lost it?
Anonymous
7/1/2025, 8:07:31 PM No.936505058
>>936503357 (OP)
He has dementia
Anonymous
7/1/2025, 8:24:17 PM No.936505740
>>936503357 (OP)
>When you're a politician so you say the thing your crowd wants to hear instead of answering the simple question on your government's policies
Anonymous
7/1/2025, 8:55:57 PM No.936506975
iTBCM8iHg0V9
iTBCM8iHg0V9
md5: 35df36ef6791f5da5f58d134da4add7a🔍
Lonely and looking for someone to change that... any takers?
Replies: >>936508558
Anonymous
7/1/2025, 9:38:14 PM No.936508558
>>936506975
not with those tattoos