errors in the Quran.pdf
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Channel name was changed to Β«Atheist βοΈ Hub - say Bye to all religions and write it in the history!Β»
Channel name was changed to Β«Atheist βοΈ Hub - say Bye to all religions and write it in the history! Let's make the world a better place and live moreπ π β€οΈΒ»
Channel name was changed to Β«Atheist βοΈ Hub - things to ponder! Write all religions in the history! Let's make the world a better place and live moreπ π β€οΈΒ»
The secret of the religion for leading the masses is that it condemns your thinking to attempt to find reasonable explanation to the problem, other than given in the scriptures, (that supports slavery, killings, beheadings, torturing, stonings, cutting genitalia, and causing improper social structure in society). It dares to condemn you with eternal hellfire for even thinking it might be wrong (it is called Shirk in muhammadinism), even when you think about it! The best manifestation of this phenomenon can be observed in Islam.
The problem any religion carries is that it makes you your closest people's ideological enemy due to their utmost ignorance that causes them to blame you in utmost ignorance if somehow you had to change your mind because your counterarguments were backed by science and evolution!
In light of contemporary genetic, anthropological and philosophical research leading to a new paradigm in which the course of human development can be metaphorically compared to a network or an entangled stream, and encouraged by the commenters on one of recent posts, I decided to draw attention to much earlier observations on this subject related to the initial stage of human evolution.
Namely, I recalled an old diagram (which I present below) and found that it comes from Nature from 2006 and is an illustration of research by scientists from Harvard and MIT, which suggested that different segments of the human genome separated from chimpanzees at different times, with some parts showing divergence only 5.4 million years ago, while others date back more than 7 million years. Such a wide range of divergence dates suggests that interbreeding may have occurred millions of years after the initial separation, creating a genetic mosaic already present in early hominids. The X chromosome in particular shows signs of later origin, which can be explained by natural selection eliminating incompatible genes from hybridization processes. Thus, fossils such as Sahelanthropus tchadensis (dated to about 7 million years ago), once considered the conventional point of separation between humans and chimpanzees, may not represent a form even close to the common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees if interbreeding continued later.
In this context, it's also worth mentioning the April 2025 study published in Nature, which used full telomere-to-telomere sequencing. This revealed that the differences between the human and chimpanzee genomes are much greater than previously thoughtβup to 14.9%, not just 1% as previously assumed. Particularly significant differences occur in the sex chromosomesβfor example, the human Y chromosome differs from that of the chimpanzee by as much as 56.6%.
www.nature.com/articles/nature04789
www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00912-8
Namely, I recalled an old diagram (which I present below) and found that it comes from Nature from 2006 and is an illustration of research by scientists from Harvard and MIT, which suggested that different segments of the human genome separated from chimpanzees at different times, with some parts showing divergence only 5.4 million years ago, while others date back more than 7 million years. Such a wide range of divergence dates suggests that interbreeding may have occurred millions of years after the initial separation, creating a genetic mosaic already present in early hominids. The X chromosome in particular shows signs of later origin, which can be explained by natural selection eliminating incompatible genes from hybridization processes. Thus, fossils such as Sahelanthropus tchadensis (dated to about 7 million years ago), once considered the conventional point of separation between humans and chimpanzees, may not represent a form even close to the common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees if interbreeding continued later.
In this context, it's also worth mentioning the April 2025 study published in Nature, which used full telomere-to-telomere sequencing. This revealed that the differences between the human and chimpanzee genomes are much greater than previously thoughtβup to 14.9%, not just 1% as previously assumed. Particularly significant differences occur in the sex chromosomesβfor example, the human Y chromosome differs from that of the chimpanzee by as much as 56.6%.
www.nature.com/articles/nature04789
www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00912-8
Nature
Genetic evidence for complex speciation of humans and chimpanzees
Nature - The evolutionary split between humans and chimpanzees is much more recent than was thought, according to a new comparison of the complete genome sequences of the two species. The data show...