Originally posted by milosh
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In response:
When, where, why, and how did life learn to reproduce itself?
Instinct and thousands of years of practice
(So the first single cell organism was able to survive for thousands and thousands of years? No wait, this is more in the order of millions or billions of years. And how can it have beneficial mutations if it has no offspring?)
There are still single-celled organisms in existence today. They're asexual. That could explain how life first began to reproduce and evolve.
With what did the first cell capable of sexual reproduction reproduce?
Sperm and Egg most likely
(This makes some level of sense. I hope you can expound some. I don't mean to ask you to expound on fact but distinctly on fiction. I wish not to know what happened as such knowledge is impossible to obtain; I wish to know what could have been.)
I'm not sure on how reproduction has evolved through time, but my guess would be it's stayed somewhat the same for as long as homosapiens have become dominant.
Why would any plant or animal want to reproduce more of its kind since this would only make more mouths to feed and decrease the chances of survival? (Does the individual have a drive to survive, or the species? How do you explain this?)
Plants and animals aren't that smart and are really good at survival.
(I don't understand this response.)
Plants and animals don't understand the concept of population control, or boom, or even population at all. The idea of survival of the fittest keeps animals in check. They eat each other and continue the process of life, while simultaneously keeping control on the overall amount of certain species. Look up how insects would be out of control without spiders. Nature balances itself out.
How did photosynthesis evolve?
Millions of years of training
(Where did food come from? If the cells lived off of thermal vents why did they change to photosynthesis?)
That's a question better suited for a botanist, but I would imagine that the plants discovered that how great of an energy source the sun was and decided to adapt. I'm being sort of nonchalant about it, I'm sure the process was gradual.
Why are there 2 sexes anyhow?
So that life can continue.
(Can life not continue asexually?)
I wish I could tell you why there are two sexes, but the only thing I can offer is that for some reason it became something worth adapting to.
If the first generation of mating species didn't have parents, how did the mating pair get to that point anyhow? Isn't evolution supposed to progress when an offspring of a mating pair has a beneficial mutation?
Not all humans evolved overnight. There were lots of Neanderthals around.
(This is not addressing humans, but the first generation of mating species.)
I'm telling you that not all humans became humans at the same time. We're not sure that there even was a "first generation of humans." It could have been random pockets of people evolving and mating for all we know. We just don't know but that's still not evidence for the existence of God.
When, where, why, and how did life learn to reproduce itself?
Instinct and thousands of years of practice
(So the first single cell organism was able to survive for thousands and thousands of years? No wait, this is more in the order of millions or billions of years. And how can it have beneficial mutations if it has no offspring?)
There are still single-celled organisms in existence today. They're asexual. That could explain how life first began to reproduce and evolve.
With what did the first cell capable of sexual reproduction reproduce?
Sperm and Egg most likely
(This makes some level of sense. I hope you can expound some. I don't mean to ask you to expound on fact but distinctly on fiction. I wish not to know what happened as such knowledge is impossible to obtain; I wish to know what could have been.)
I'm not sure on how reproduction has evolved through time, but my guess would be it's stayed somewhat the same for as long as homosapiens have become dominant.
Why would any plant or animal want to reproduce more of its kind since this would only make more mouths to feed and decrease the chances of survival? (Does the individual have a drive to survive, or the species? How do you explain this?)
Plants and animals aren't that smart and are really good at survival.
(I don't understand this response.)
Plants and animals don't understand the concept of population control, or boom, or even population at all. The idea of survival of the fittest keeps animals in check. They eat each other and continue the process of life, while simultaneously keeping control on the overall amount of certain species. Look up how insects would be out of control without spiders. Nature balances itself out.
How did photosynthesis evolve?
Millions of years of training
(Where did food come from? If the cells lived off of thermal vents why did they change to photosynthesis?)
That's a question better suited for a botanist, but I would imagine that the plants discovered that how great of an energy source the sun was and decided to adapt. I'm being sort of nonchalant about it, I'm sure the process was gradual.
Why are there 2 sexes anyhow?
So that life can continue.
(Can life not continue asexually?)
I wish I could tell you why there are two sexes, but the only thing I can offer is that for some reason it became something worth adapting to.
If the first generation of mating species didn't have parents, how did the mating pair get to that point anyhow? Isn't evolution supposed to progress when an offspring of a mating pair has a beneficial mutation?
Not all humans evolved overnight. There were lots of Neanderthals around.
(This is not addressing humans, but the first generation of mating species.)
I'm telling you that not all humans became humans at the same time. We're not sure that there even was a "first generation of humans." It could have been random pockets of people evolving and mating for all we know. We just don't know but that's still not evidence for the existence of God.
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