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To: PatrickHenry
What's the problem? If the ape is suited for his environment, and if his environment doesn't change, the ape won't change either.

Well maybe I am making an assumption but I figured that the ape experienced the same environment changes as man did and I would have expected at least some changes over the same time period. I also thought that man and ape had about the same abilities at one time. When man changed so many times while the ape never changed I find that confusing.

20 posted on 07/10/2002 2:49:11 PM PDT by VRWC_minion
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To: VRWC_minion
When man changed so many times while the ape never changed I find that confusing.

Look, it only takes one mutated ape (or ape ancestor) to start the ball rolling toward getting a small population of slightly different creatures, living with the originals. They move away and they form their own breeding population, which in time, after perhaps numerous further mutations, becomes a species different from the ancestral stock. Now you have two species. The originals haven't changed. No one individual has changed, but you now have a new species. Repeat. Repeat again. That's how it works.

30 posted on 07/10/2002 4:10:28 PM PDT by PatrickHenry
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