• ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      59 minutes ago

      Nah its a fun concept.

      Like imagine you just go back in time and randomly kill a person. Bam, a lot of people never get born, history changes dramatically.

      Having a child is biggest butterfly effect you can have on the space time contiuum. Want more chaos, have more children. LET CHAOS REIGN!

  • davidgro@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    My bloodline ends with me, but I have step kids. So kinda yes, but kinda no more than a typical person whose genes do continue but their story is forgotten eventually.

    This really hit me recently when sorting my mom’s belongings and finding a ton of photographs of people I don’t recognize, and having nobody left to ask about who they were, how/if they were related to me, and what their life was like.

  • Boinkage@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Bloodline doesn’t have to end for that to happen. Even if you have kids, in three generations no one will remember your name or your life. Do you know the names and history of your great great grandparents? No one will remember us and it will not be important whether they do or don’t.

    • Mothra@mander.xyz
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      10 hours ago

      This is very true, and also, the reverse is true as well: your bloodline can end yet you can still be remembered if you did something remarkable enough. I’m sure there are tons of well known figures in history whose bloodlines are no more today

      • Sergio@slrpnk.net
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        9 hours ago

        One of the things I learned as a scientist is that for any major accomplishment, there are thousands of people who did difficult, necessary, and not-widely-recognized work to make that accomplishment possible.

        • Danitos@reddthat.com
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          47 minutes ago

          I like to think that things are even more complicated, as we depend on a lot of people, even if we are not aware of it: random taxi/bus drivers, restaurant/grocery staff, your ISP workers, random factory workers, etc.

          We depend on far mote people than we realize, and not just us but also people working in advancing the limits of human knowledge. We wouldn’t have Einstein without some of his totally unexpected yet unkownly related contemporanies. Following this logic, we wouldn’t have Einstein without his grandparents, and even those grandparent’s contemporanies, and this just keeps going.

          As Lain says, we are all connected.

    • HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com
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      9 hours ago

      yeah and its like whats a bloodline. There is the whole mitochondrial eve thing. I saw a youtube video on genetics and variation and generations and it did not take long for less than 1% of enetics to be in common with an ancestor and they used the british royal family as an examples so pretty inbred to.

    • Rikudou_Sage@lemmings.world
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      11 hours ago

      On the biological level, true enough.

      I find it kinda fascinating that every single ancestor of mine lived long enough to procreate. My life can be directly linked to some unknown single celled organisms billions of years ago and every evolutionary step between those and a human, that’s really weird to think about.

      • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        It’s not his best work, but Mike Skinner made a song about it a decade or two ago. Like. Almost verbatim what you typed which is why I remembered it.

        For billions of years since the outset of time

        Every single one of your ancestors survived

        Every single person on your Mum and Dad’s side

        Successfully looked after and passed onto new life

        What are the chances of that like?

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yc9gIzRhrvY

        Not like it’s a bad song, it’s just Mike fucking Skinner, so he’s got a pretty high standard for one of his best songs.

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      Yep, the only thing that’s lost is any mutations unique to that “bloodline”.

      That rarely happens, and when it does it’s almost always something that wasn’t beneficial to begin with.

      We’re all just different combinations of the same DNA. Some of our ancestors were just isolated enough for already old mutations to become concentrated enough to get expressed in the majority of the population.

      Like, going off memory but there’s like 17 different mutations for eye color?

      None of them cease to exist when they’re not expressed, and they still have the same chance of showing up later.

      The Blue Fugette’s from Kentucky is a great example. The original heads of that family was a French man and an Irish woman who’s bloodlines hadn’t crossed in probably thousands of years.

      But they both had the same rare recessive trait for their blood to be less oxygenated than normal. So their kids had a blue hue. Because they moved to an isolated location with a small amount of other families, their kids with double recessive genes lead to a bunch of blue people in a couple generations after it had spread in the population.

      Even if they had all died out for some reason, it wouldn’t stop another random couple with the resseive genes from meeting and moving to another isolated population.