Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Reflection paper 4

What we see, and what they want you to see.
What I learned from Early Human Phylogeny is that everyone will adapt and become more knowledgeable then the previous species. We are taught to better ourselves and to our run the person next to us. Though there will always be a few missing parts for example in the Phylogeny the “Sanhelanthropus tehandensis, and the Prrorin tugensis” weren’t linked with any particular group. Could this be that what they had to offer wasn’t passed on because of lack of communication. Or was it because our first species skipped a step because what they had to offer wasn’t at a greater power from what they originally know. We learn that as we grow our information doesn’t die, we pass on our legacy and hope that some one else can benefit through our trouble, and provide a safe way of surviving. In Hominids after each generation they saw the difference whether it was the brain, the body, or how they used different tools for survive. They were still evolving generation after generation, improving what they already know, and learning what has not been taught. In Lucy case I believe that back then our communication wasn’t as keen as it is today. What if we were in the same community just never meet? Chimps waddle as Lucy walked. What if our ancestors had a mutation and that was how our chimp became a Lucy. A mutation or a virus which our body accepted and slowly changed our body structured. No two humans are identical, even when they produce an offspring you have your father, mother, and your own fragment and DNA that makes you, who you are. It is known that AIDS came from a virus or a mutation what makes you cancel out that maybe we were mutated along the line. That we are originally supposed to look like Chimps, but have some type of virus in us that label us as humans. Lucy is also an example of a midget, what if we originated from midgets though our chromosomes decided to mutate with what ever our environment was feeding us and took an adaption to allow us to have growth spurts. We all know that human migrate where they once live isn’t where they always lived. It was proven that our ancestors were originated in Africa and then migrated to Europe and Asia. Where we originated is not always what we learned and how we evolved from our beginners point. I believe we migrated to better ourselves. Africa probably didn’t have all the resources we needed or wanted. Or perhaps it might have been too dangerous as the population grew. Wild life came into play because expanding out means other parts much reach further out or have a mutual boundaries. The key point is not to look at where they originated from but why did they migrate and how did they survive.

No comments:

Post a Comment