Moderator: EMG
Jack wrote:Nor that pills can do everything hypnosis can.
Lissar wrote:I'm pretty sure that you cannot change your eye color through hypnosis. Eye color is based on multiple genes, and you cannot change your DNA.
goldragon_70 wrote:Lissar wrote:I'm pretty sure that you cannot change your eye color through hypnosis. Eye color is based on multiple genes, and you cannot change your DNA.
Actually DNA makes RNA which in turn causes the manufacture of the different parts of the body, so there are several places were that can be changed to cause change in the human body.
You also have cases were hair color, and even eye color have changed over a persons ageing.
Lissar wrote:DNA does not "make" RNA. DNA is simply a blueprint which cannot be changed. RNA is able to make a copy of that data and bring it to ribosomes, where polypeptides are produced. In eukaryotic cells (human cells are eukaryotic), certain parts of the messenger RNA are excised so that many polypeptids can be made with the same stretch of DNA. Even though this occurs, it occurs according to the DNA. Everything is up to those instructions.
Eye color is determined by DNA, which does not change, and therefore the RNA isn't going to suddenly create a polypeptide that codes for something else. My eyes are sometimes blue and sometimes green, and you know what? It all depends on what color shirt or eyeshadow I'm wearing. So my eye color doesn't change; it's already in between two colors, and so in comparison to blue, it seems green, and in comparison to green, it seems blue.
And you keep misspelling the word "where." "Were" is a verb, as in, "We were stubbornly refusing to accept that Lissar might know a thing or two about basic genetics."
goldragon_70 wrote:RNA does not always directly construct pats of the body, but can effects the body to make parts of itself, so even after the RNA, there are places for change. RNA can also be effect in gene therapy (even though for a short time) Viruses effect DNA (rarely to a good end), and Cancer is a reflection of changes in the cell, including DNA. And yes if DNA can be changed so can RNA.
Lissar wrote:Cancer is a mutation, a mistake. 50% of the time, it is caused by a problem with p53, which normally finds mutations and has them corrected. Most cases of cervical cancer are caused by a virus that attacks the cervical cells and inserts its own parasitic genetic information.
I would really appreciate it if people would consider the difference between cancer and changing eye color. Cancer is a terrible and serious disease, and it is characterized by mutations that affect the reproductive rate of cells. If we knew how mutations occurred, and we were able to control that, cancer would not be an issue. So if hypnosis could change DNA, maybe my best friend would still have her thyroid gland, my classmate wouldn't have missed a year of school, and my grandfather would still be alive.
Lissar wrote:If you want to go and argue about how evolutionary change could not have occurred without mutations, you're forgetting that individuals do not change phenotypically, only genotypically, and that genotypic change must occur in the cells that become gametes. That's why cancer is not passed down (although you can have a genetic predisposition); it usually occurs in somatic cells. So the first child to have DNA that coded for blue eyes did not have parents whose eye colors changed from another color to blue.
goldragon_70, I have absolutely no idea what you're even saying. If you read my previous post, you may have seen that I was talking about polypeptides as the end product of transcription and translation.
Lissar wrote:That's strange, considering I've just completed a year of college intro biology, and I had already taken intro and advanced biology in high school prior to that. Perhaps you aren't remembering your class correctly. Also, anatomy and physiology aren't genetics.
goldragon_70 wrote:Lissar wrote:That's strange, considering I've just completed a year of college intro biology, and I had already taken intro and advanced biology in high school prior to that. Perhaps you aren't remembering your class correctly. Also, anatomy and physiology aren't genetics.
Right, but DNA and RNA is part of the study, as well as study on amino Acids and how they are used in building cells and chemicals the body uses. And it was covered in my older classes as well. Biology tends to be far more general in science then Human Anatomy and Physiology.
Actually Cancer usually cased by damaged (mutated) DNA, and this is usually part of the definition of cancer. (I know this was a few post ago, but the fact you didn't quite add it, has been bugging me.)
Any ways my original point before we got so far off. There is places were the construction of the body can be changed, and keeping a negative attitude on something will not get it done, weather it will happen or not.
Science itself seeks to explain phenomenons by observance, and then hypothesis are made, which are then tested, and if not diproven are then made theories, which can still be disproven. So nothing is solid fact, only proven until disproven.
Have there been studies done on the chance of obscene overpessimism panning out?CuriousG wrote:Statistical studies have shown that obscene overoptimism has less than a 0.5% chance of panning out... Of course, that's only proven until disproven.
birchwood wrote:People told the Wright Brothers that their machine would never fly, they laughed at Edison's idea of the light bulb. When Bell invented the telephone, people said it was a trick, that the wires were hollow and that carried the voice, because they didn't understand the forces at work. And Roger Bannister was told that no one would ever break the 4 minute mile. Even fitness experts, and coaches said that. If fact, I bet they could have found evidence in a text book to prove their point to him. Probably something about the oxygen uptake of the human body. Good thing he didn't listen to them.
CuriousG wrote:Statistical studies have shown that obscene overoptimism has less than a 0.5% chance of panning out... Of course, that's only proven until disproven.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 131 guests