Message from @ETBrooD

Discord ID: 644657894431916058


2019-11-14 21:57:29 UTC  

During and after

2019-11-14 21:57:35 UTC  

Your offspring will be affected

2019-11-14 21:57:37 UTC  

There's literally not enough time in the universe for the alternative

2019-11-14 21:57:37 UTC  

But random mutations and random recombination of chromosomes from each parent... they cannot be driven to benefit high IQ because "better nutrition". It's random.

2019-11-14 21:57:48 UTC  

You need culling of the weak for evolution to be beneficial.

2019-11-14 21:58:04 UTC  

Our epigenetics, yes, but I don't think that everyone having more food increases the likelihood of genes for intelligence being selected or mutating

2019-11-14 21:58:05 UTC  

And wealth as got rid of all culling.

2019-11-14 21:58:10 UTC  

@whiic explain fetal alcohol syndrome

2019-11-14 21:58:33 UTC  

@ETBrooD Isn't that a **DEVELOPMENTAL** disorder?

2019-11-14 21:58:37 UTC  

Because of?

2019-11-14 21:58:54 UTC  

Meaning, it doesn't go back to history and re-do the time of fertilization.

2019-11-14 21:59:11 UTC  

It only changes development of the fetus, but not the genes.

2019-11-14 21:59:19 UTC  

Damaged gene pool due to bad nutrition

2019-11-14 21:59:26 UTC  

Alcohol damages cells, including neurons. It doesn't change the genes

2019-11-14 21:59:35 UTC  

It does change the cells, yes it does

2019-11-14 21:59:38 UTC  

Alcoholism is heritable

2019-11-14 22:00:02 UTC  

"Damaged gene pool due to bad nutrition" how is that same as fetal alcohol disorder?

2019-11-14 22:00:10 UTC  

Same exact cause

2019-11-14 22:00:16 UTC  

No it's not.

2019-11-14 22:00:19 UTC  

Yes it is

2019-11-14 22:00:31 UTC  

If you only eat ice cream during your lifetime

2019-11-14 22:00:32 UTC  

Inheritable genetic defects and developmental issues are different.

2019-11-14 22:00:34 UTC  

And you then have kids

2019-11-14 22:00:41 UTC  

Your kids are more likely to develop illnesses

2019-11-14 22:00:52 UTC  

Alcoholism is inheritable in two ways
1: you witness your parents drinking, which encourages you to (not genetic)
2: Your mother drinked in the whom, which essentially means you've already drank alcohol (again, not genetic)

2019-11-14 22:01:29 UTC  

There could also be some genes that make one more prone to addiction in general as a reason 3.

2019-11-14 22:01:36 UTC  

true

2019-11-14 22:01:43 UTC  

But that doesn't change whether mother drinks during pregnancy or not.

2019-11-14 22:01:55 UTC  

That gene would be inherited anyway, even if mother was sober but had it.

2019-11-14 22:02:15 UTC  

Provided the gene was not passed on due to recombination of chromosomes and the dad didn't have it.

2019-11-14 22:03:16 UTC  

Anyway, ETBrooD really doesn't understand differences between genotype and phenotype...

2019-11-14 22:03:25 UTC  

That paper just refuted you

2019-11-14 22:03:30 UTC  

Keep sperging

2019-11-14 22:03:53 UTC  

Heritability of alcohol use disorders (i.e alcoholism) is not same as fetal alcohol disorder.

2019-11-14 22:03:59 UTC  

not even that, I think he's confusing genes with epigenetics and hyping up the latter as more important than it is

2019-11-14 22:04:04 UTC  

Oh it's not the same

2019-11-14 22:04:12 UTC  

Therefore what I said about heritability of alcohol abuse is wrong?

2019-11-14 22:04:19 UTC  

<:BIGBRAIN:501101491428392991>

2019-11-14 22:04:48 UTC  

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