I'll get a rope.
I 'm acknowledging the theory that specialization is bad. However, How many people go through life and never find that one thing that they are really good at? Maybe Spiderman is Bendis's "white buffalo".
That is the most ridiculous thing, in the world.
A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook…
Teenage Alien Viking Turtles?
FAN SERVICE! There it has been said. The only thing "good" about either of these movies is the twisted modicum of fan service provided through some damn fine costuming (and genetics). But also people don't want a hokie religion in their science fiction anymore than they want multivitamins in their candy. It…
Always always always movie first. The book will always be superior to the movie it inspires. So why not enjoy both?
As a manly, manly male type man myself, I don't even recognize the color pink. No seriously, I'm color blind. And if you think a bowling ball is bad, try being the only kid on a soccer team in pink Umbros. Never lived it down. My parents also didn't practice color based gender norming, just the other 19 million…
So what non-biological process creates amino acids? Evolution I get, but before that the leap from non-life to life seems pretty huge and unexplained.
You mean like give the customer what they want?
Oddly, this subject is at the very heart of my agnosticism and keeps me from going "full atheist". Where did the amino acids come from, and why would they form life when they got to Goldilock's Planet? Entropy would seem to be the enemy of life: why didn't these amino chains just fall apart? Then RNA, DNA, Mahi…