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/sci/ - Science & Math


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3808510 No.3808510 [Reply] [Original]

what are your thoughts on this /sci/?

>> No.3808532

Over-generalisations,
Over-generalisations everywhere.

>> No.3808547
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3808547

>>3808532
lol can you be more specific?

is this better if i quote medical journals?

>> No.3808560

> "mixed children"
> pictures of albinos and vitiligo sufferers

Yeah, gtfo.

>> No.3808567
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3808567

>>3808560
>>3808532
I guess you do not know how direct correlation works...

look up medical journals for viltigo and the relatively high rates among mulattos

>> No.3808591

>>3808560
oh what is the matter? no reply,

>> No.3808594

reference for
>The same is true between humans and chimpanzees?

>> No.3808609

>>3808567
Um... is your pic related to the OP's first picture?

I can't see what are you fighting for.

>> No.3808635

>>3808594

Also the "intelligence is 85% heritable" thing. And the entire left "genotype" bit.

>> No.3808650

>>3808510
>the same is true between humans and chimpanzees
This is confusing, are you talking about specific racial markers or every gene? I must be missing something here.

>> No.3808691

>>3808594
I'm thinking, chimps don't even have the same number of chromosomes as humans, so this has got to be bullshit.

Quick fact check using Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chimpanzee
>Research by Mary-Claire King in 1973 found 99% identical DNA between human beings and chimpanzees,[4] although research since has modified that finding to about 94%[5] commonality, with some of the difference occurring in non-coding DNA.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_genetic_variation
>The nucleotide diversity between humans is about 0.1%,
>It is estimated that approximately 0.4% of the genomes of unrelated people typically differ with respect to copy number.