alexflint comments on Simon Conway Morris: "Aliens are likely to look and behave like us". - Less Wrong

2 [deleted] 25 January 2010 02:16PM

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Comment author: alexflint 25 January 2010 08:45:19PM 2 points [-]

Perhaps so, but I guess Simon Conway Morris would disagree here. He might point out the independent evolution of the camera eye in multiple phyla, or any of these: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_examples_of_convergent_evolution. His view is certainly an extreme one but it's backed up by extensive evidence and shouldn't be dismissed off-hand.

Comment author: Zachary_Kurtz 25 January 2010 09:26:12PM 1 point [-]

that list is broken, but I take your point.

However, I'm not sure how relevant it is. Covergent evolution is quite rare, when you consider all of evolutionary history. The last common ancestor of cephalopod and vertebrates (camera eye) was 750 mya and had a distinct photorecevier. A recent studies have shown a 70% similarity in the gene expression profile between octopus and human eye tissue. This suggests that they are not so convergent as commonly thought. (source: http://stke.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/sci;313/5795/1914)

Simmons suggest that convergent evolution, is not only possible but likely, by tacking on an extra almost 3 Billion years to this time scale? I doubt that our genetic material and/or cell structure would even be the same, given this amount of time.

Sounds like someone needs to check their priors.