@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold I don’t tend to do remedial evolution on Twitter. But since you say you are an evolutionary geneticist, I’ll make an exception. I’ll go slow, since you seem to have missed a lot already. Consider it a public service. [thread 1/14]
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold This is an evolutionary tree. Some branches display parts of history that we never inhabited. One of those branches on this tree, for instance, terminates in the taxon called “orangutan”. We were never orangutans. But we were—and still are—apes. As are orangutans. 2/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold (Tree thinking—really grasping what phylogenetic trees are conveying, and what they are not—takes some time, but turns out to be necessary if you are to grok lineage level thinking, and macroevolutionary concepts like synapomorphy, homology, monophyly, etc.) 3/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold We are also fish. This does not mean that we are clownfish or eels or trout, or that we ever have been any of those things. Here’s another graphic that you may find helpful: 4/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold We are also reptiles. This does not mean that we are Komodo dragons or skinks or T. rexes, or that we ever have been any of those things. 5/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold Traits that are new and shared at the level of a clade (“synapomorphies”—e.g. vertebrae in vertebrates, mammary glands in mammals) are different from traits found in just a few members of a clade (e.g. sequential hermaphroditism in clownfish). 6/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold Conflating the individual with the whole is easily revealed as an error. Take facultative parthenogenesis (“virgin birth”) in Komodo dragons. If Komodo dragons can do it, then all reptiles can! And if all reptiles can, all animals can! And if all animals, all life can! 7/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold Reversals do happen, of course. For instance, snakes have lost their legs. Whales have returned to the sea, from whence they once came. Ostriches have lost flight. 8/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold Some traits, though, never, or nearly never, reverse. We have no evidence of any vertebrate species that, as an adult, has no vertebrae. Nor of any species of mammal that has females without mammary glands. Nor of any squamate male that lacks paired hemipenes (look it up). 9/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold Similarly, the *lineage* to which we belong is one long, uninterrupted string of sexual reproduction for at least the last 500 million years. Since we were indeed early fish, we have no evidence of anyone *in our particular lineage* going asexual. 10/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold The fact that, off on a couple different branches of the vertebrate tree *on which we never traveled,* there is some hermaphroditism, or parthenogenesis, does not mean that we have ever been a hermaphroditic, or parthenogenetic, species. 11/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold Furthermore, that number—that 500 million years of uninterrupted sexual reproduction? It’s conservative. In fact, our direct ancestors have probably been sexually reproducing, without pause, for somewhere between one and two *billion* years. 12/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold But evidence is extremely strong for 500 million years of uninterrupted sexual reproduction in our particular lineage, so I’m willing to forego the additional strength of those half a billion to one a half billion years. Just to be on the side of caution. 13/
@GodflyThe @JenelopeJohnson @maxrenke @SadLittleKobold To summarize: the human lineage has been sexually reproducing for at least 500 million years.

Males produce tiny zippy gametes (sperm). Females produce large, sessile gametes (eggs). And it’s been that way for a very long time. /end

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More from @HeatherEHeying

18 Mar
The mainstream narrative on the search for SARS-Cov2 origins reads like the dystopian endgame of a postmodern world. It’s anti-scientific, anti-reason, and anti-human. Humanity can do better, and we must. [thread 1/12]
wsj.com/articles/who-c…
The WHO’s verdict on SARS-CoV2 origins was arrived at by a show of hands, an informal vote in which how individuals voted was visible to all.

Guess what, though. Reality doesn’t care about democratic norms. Reality is what it is, regardless of what people think about it. 2/
“The team members said they didn’t have the mandate, expertise and access to investigate a potential lab leak.”

My god. And then they voted on whether lab leak was a plausible explanation for the origin of SARS-CoV2 in a show of hands in front of their Chinese counterparts. 3/
Read 12 tweets
21 Feb
I had a conversation with Meghan Murphy on science, and SARS-CoV2, and feminism, and sex and gender, and more. Meghan Murphy was booted from twitter for the 21st century crime of stating the obvious. She’s still on YouTube, which is good for all of us.
I made two errors of (biological) fact in this conversation. I’m not going to say here what they are. If you watch and you think you spot them, let me know!
Privately, I've heard from a few people as to what the two "errors of (biological) fact" might be, but since twitter is apparently not like a classroom in which patience can be inculcated, I will state the errors here:
Read 4 tweets
16 Feb
On top of the global pandemic, Portland, Oregon had months of protests & riots; 10 days of wildfires that gave us the planet’s worst air quality; and now this: snow and ice storms that wiped out power *and* cell service for a huge number of us. (Portland is under all the red.)
Earlier, I was out walking the dog in the deep icy slush as an explosive melt kicked in: The sun broke through, and days of accumulated ice loosened, breaking off trees, shattering on the ground like porcelain , crystalline ice casting shard-shadows.
I spoke to many strangers, all out in the strangest conditions many of us had ever seen, marveling at what we saw. Many roads were blocked by branches and trees. I carried the dog over a downed power line. One man said, “I thought 2020 was bad. But here we are: apocalypse.”
Read 4 tweets
4 Feb
Attacks on women in sports are showing up at the federal level.

These erasures are discriminatory, harmful, and unscientific. Here’s why ⬇️
FACT ONE: Trans girls are natal boys.

MYTH: Sex is not binary.
Gametes reveal our sex. Going through development as a male permanently changes your body, and provides advantages in strength, speed, and power.
Variation within categories does not render the categories invalid.
FACT TWO: Trans athletes have an unfair advantage in sports.

Variation is a feature of complex systems. The fact that some female athletes perform as well or better than some trans athletes is not evidence of your point. Take some statistics, do better, and stop gaslighting us.
Read 12 tweets
31 Jan
You all ready? Here we go.

Science doesn’t work by fiat, or by forced, fabricated consensus.

That consensus that you see before you? It’s a mirage. It’s a farce.

Science embraces all hypotheses, and says: let me at ‘em. [thread 1/30]
Science does not require a lab coat, or fancy tech, or a big grant. Having a credential and using an authoritarian tone are *useful* for tamping down dissent, but “useful” and “truth-seeking” aren’t always the same, are they now? 2/
.@BretWeinstein & I have the credentials—evolutionary processes are central to zoonotic disease *and* gain-of-function research. But we lack the perverse incentives that might keep us quiet. Refusing to be bullied into a canoe turns out to be freeing. 3/
Read 30 tweets
13 Jan
All of us are capable of beauty, grace & strength, and also of ugliness, spite & weakness. We make brilliant decisions, and bad ones. Sometimes we follow when we should lead in a different direction. Sometimes we conform so as not to feel alone. At our best, we forgive. [thread]
Here are three amazing pieces relevant to this moment, insightful and deep and enjoyable to read. They do not ask you to suffer for your sins, or to turn in your neighbors. They invite you to think, by offering observation and interpretation, and letting you go from there.
.@walterkirn writes of the “liberal switch from skepticism to sanctimony about the most powerful arms of the Establishment” and of “liberal puritanism…fears that the wrong sort of people might be happy, or that their happiness might be of the wrong kind.”
harpers.org/archive/2018/0…
Read 6 tweets

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