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http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la- ... 8832.story
Unfortunately, in humans, it may cause bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, not cat love.
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Oooo, thanks! I'd forgotten about that one. Uuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuugh! Those eye stalks, THOSE EYE STALKS!Top Gun wrote:There are some other crazy-ass examples of parasitism that are fairly similar to that. I remember reading about one species of parasite that infects a snail, makes its eye stalks swell up to a huge size, and compels it to forgo its usual fear of open areas and climb to the top of plants. Birds mistake the massive eye stalks for caterpillars and eat them right off the snail, and the parasite continues its life cycle in the bird's digestive tract. Apparently, the snails often survive having their eyes ripped off, and may go on to produce future parasite generations. Nature is weird.
Evolutionary alterations in genetic programming? Why not? Could have happened totally by accident, and since it worked for the organisms in question, it stayed around as a successful scheme for survival. I mean, viruses are just weird little specialized programs too. Why have them at all? But if you want, it could be an experiment by some creator trying things out to see what worked.flip wrote:Eh I don't know, 2 things I would want first to observe behavior before and after and brain scans before and after. I would think the parasite causes some kind of delirium or chemical imbalance in the mouse, which is basically mind control
but also does not mean the parasite, the mouse or the cat are intelligently doing this. Also seems more than ordered, I mean I believe in evolution at this point, or some form of it, maybe not the clinical/lump everything together definition, but there's something to it. The snail seems perfectly designed to be the parasitic worms host, even living longer after having
fulfilled it's purpose. That they all (mouse/cat snail/bird), evolved together to develop this co-dependency, that is interesting as hell, if you understand exactly what is involved to make these developments. It strengthens my faith.
They need a program to do so.Stem cells extracted from embryos are prized by scientists because they are capable of turning into any cell or tissue type in the body.]
Heh, heh. I lean more towards science than religion for explaining the way things are in the world, I do have a science degree after all. But there is always that nagging sense in the back of my mind that some of our "explanations" don't always fit right with the way things are.Alter-Fox wrote:I didn't say anything about proving it -- though you are right, science can never 'prove' anything absolutely, only beyond reasonable doubt. I said there's no way to convince everyone one way or the other, and everyone has a right to believe what they want to believe, no matter how infuriating it is to people on the other side XD.