>>31
Why would the concept of genome require evolution? Is the genome (for humans), not just ~3 billion nucleotides, which encodes for every damn protein in our bodies? Isn't it true that once we've solved the problem of how all the encoded proteins interact, we've completely figured out how a human works, from kidney to brain, and life to death?
Unfortunately, I'm not a poorly executed troll. I took AP bio 4 yrs ago, and we used Campbell. We were taught what evolution was, and some examples (like those moths that changed color according to air pollution). We learned some mechanisms that speed up evolution like bottlenecks, and mechanisms of speciation like allopatric speciation. Of course, the reason I seem so retarded is because they never bothered to explain why evolution was so important.