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Meta
Monthly Archives: February 2012
Typos
In popular fiction, mutants are cool. They have special powers and look like Hugh Jackman. In reality, though, mutations that have any effect at all are almost always bad for you. Everybody has a number of mutations of varying severity. … Continue reading
Posted in Genetics
45 Comments
Gauge Transformation
As a reader pointed out, you don’t need to to have a flypaper memory to be a physicist. There you can go a long way with a few basic facts and a long chain of mathematical reasoning. You can see … Continue reading
Posted in World War Two
59 Comments
Low-hanging fruit
In The Great Stagnation, Tyler Cowen discusses a real problem – a slowdown in technical innovation, with slow economic growth as a consequence.. I think his perspective is limited, since he doesn’t know much about the inward nature of … Continue reading
Posted in Low-hanging Fruit
39 Comments
Lactase Persistence and Understanding History
I threw together some simulations a while ago for a lecture on selection. As usual they led to thinking about some of the implications of selection that I knew but that I had never really internalized. Here, for example is … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
24 Comments
Islands in the sky
There are three major high-altitude regions inhabited by humans: highland Ethiopia, Tibet, and the Andean altiplano. In each of these three cases, the locals have adapted in various ways to high altitude – physiological adaptations, as well as cultural. To … Continue reading
Posted in Altitude adaptations, Archaic humans, Denisovans
19 Comments
Depths of Madness
I’ve said it before, but it’s probably time to say it again. The most likely explanation for human homosexuality is that it is caused by some pathogen. It’s too common to be mutational pressure (and we don’t see syndromic versions, … Continue reading
Posted in Evolutionary Medicine, Homosexuality
315 Comments
Diamond on domestication
Jared Diamond, in discussing animal domestication, claims that the local availability of species with the right qualities for domestication was key, rather than anything special about the biology or culture of the humans living there. In some cases that may … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
48 Comments
Reconstruction
There’s a cluster of Y-chromosomes found in inner Eurasia that vary only slightly, and thus must have a recent common ancestor. They are surprisingly common: there are something like 16 million carriers. The analysts who discovered this (Zerjal et al) … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
16 Comments
Backwardness
Back around the time I was born, anthropologists sometimes talked about some cultures being more advanced than others. This was before they decided that all cultures are equal, except that some are more equal than others. Anyhow, that kind of … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
59 Comments
My Brush with Reproductive Success
Sadly I am a big fan of the traditional approach to these matters so I never followed up with them. Since this blog could use a touch of humor, …..
Posted in Uncategorized
28 Comments