Nutrient-dependent / Pheromone–controlled thermodynamics and thermoregulation
2013-03-09T02:52:19Z (GMT)
by
Natural selection for nutrients results in their metabolism to pheromones that control reproduction in species from microbes to man. In some species, sex differences in pheromones enable sexual selection. Using what is known about the molecular mechanisms common to species from microbes to man, an argument can be made from biological facts that extends to non-random nutrient-dependent pheromone-controlled adaptive evolution. This biological-based argument can be compared to arguments that might be made to support a cosmological / mathematical argument for random mutations theory.
Categories
- Microbiology not elsewhere classified
- Atomic and molecular physics
- Other biomedical and clinical sciences not elsewhere classified
- Oncology and carcinogenesis not elsewhere classified
- Thermodynamics and statistical physics
- Evolution of developmental systems
- Animal physiology - biophysics
- Human biophysics
- Genetics not elsewhere classified
- Sociology not elsewhere classified
- Immunology not elsewhere classified
- Animal physiology - cell
- Animal physiology - systems
- Plant cell and molecular biology
- Animal cell and molecular biology
- Neurosciences not elsewhere classified
- Biochemistry and cell biology not elsewhere classified
- Ecology not elsewhere classified
- Evolutionary biology not elsewhere classified
- Behavioural neuroscience
License
CC BY 4.0