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I Accept the Theory of Evolution

Humans and chimpanzees both carry inactive genes acquired from viruses.
This occurs because some viruses insert a copy of their genome into the DNA of whichever species they infect. These are called retro-viruses... HIV is one such.

Where such viruses infect the cells that produce sperm and eggs, they can be passed on across generations.

The human genome contains thousands of these remnants of long-past infections... now rendered harmless... and so does the chimpanzee genome.

Most of them are in exactly the same place on both genomes.
That’s astonishing, so I’ll repeat it: most of them are on [i]exactly[/i] the same place on both genomes.

Let’s choose an explanation from a few (non-exhaustive) options:

1. astonishing coincidence

2. when the gods created humans they decided to sprinkle around several thousand retro-viruses, and they put the preponderance of retroviruses at matching sites on both species because... umm... because... well... because... stop questioning the gods!

3. The majority of retroviruses match because both species inherited them from a common ancestor, who had itself accumulated them from the line of its own descent.

The small number which do not match are the remnants of infections that each species has warded off independently since divergence from the common ancestor... as predicted by the Theory of Evolution.
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Tatsumi · 31-35, M
Reminds me of the, probably irrelevant, fact that the human genome contains a deactivated gene for dog-level smell. From...What's his name. I'm too tired to remember. The British super-athiest biologist who always goes around vehemnently dispelling religious ideas.
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@Tatsumi Richard Dawkins?

That's fascinating, I never heard that before. I was mocking a guy on here who claimed to be able to smell as well as a dog; maybe he wasn't exaggerating. Although, humans lack the physical turbinate structures that dogs and other animals with long snouts have, so even if the "software" could be activated, our "hardware" couldn't run it.