Lamarck Memes

Posts tagged with Lamarck

Lamarck's Evolutionary Revenge

Lamarck's Evolutionary Revenge
Oh the DRAMA in evolutionary biology! This meme is basically the scientific equivalent of a soap opera! A cartoon character literally STRETCHES ITS ARM to find a biologist, and then proudly declares Lamarck wasn't wrong - he just needed better terminology! For those who slept through Bio 101, Lamarck thought organisms could pass acquired traits to offspring (like giraffes stretching their necks). Meanwhile, Darwin's character crashes through the wall like some evolution Kool-Aid man, screaming about genetics while the stretched-arm character smugly mentions epigenetics. It's the 200-year-old scientific beef that never ends! Modern science shows Lamarck wasn't COMPLETELY bonkers - epigenetic mechanisms can indeed affect gene expression across generations without changing DNA sequences. The ultimate scientific mic drop!

Sure Lamarck, Let's Get You To Bed

Sure Lamarck, Let's Get You To Bed
Darwin's just escorting Lamarck home after he suggested giraffes evolved long necks by stretching to reach tall trees. The comic perfectly illustrates Lamarckian inheritance—the debunked theory that acquired traits pass to offspring. Meanwhile, Darwin's sitting there with natural selection like, "That's cute, but no." The comic's conclusion that giraffes are just stubborn horses is exactly the kind of nonsense that would make Lamarck nod enthusiastically while Darwin reaches for the aspirin. Evolution doesn't work by trying really hard, no matter how much undergrads wish it did during finals week.

The Great Giraffe Neck Stretch Fail

The Great Giraffe Neck Stretch Fail
The ultimate evolutionary smackdown! This meme brilliantly roasts Lamarck's theory of acquired characteristics - where giraffes supposedly stretched their necks to reach higher leaves and passed those stretched necks to their offspring. The progression shows trees growing taller, giraffes stretching more and more until... the moon tells them to back off! It's basically Darwin and modern genetics giving Lamarckism the scientific equivalent of "nice try, but no." The title references Cuvier and Weismann, two scientists who were major critics of Lamarckism. Weismann famously cut off mice tails for generations to prove that acquired traits aren't inherited (spoiler: baby mice kept being born with tails). Biology burn of the highest order!

Lamarck Vs. Darwin (2020)

Lamarck Vs. Darwin (2020)
The perfect evolutionary mic drop! This person is making a Lamarckian argument (that we'd evolve masks if we needed them), completely missing how natural selection actually works. Evolution doesn't respond to "needs" - it's about random variations and differential survival rates over countless generations. The reply is brilliantly pointing out this flawed reasoning by asking about shoes. By that same logic, shouldn't humans have evolved built-in shoes after thousands of years of needing foot protection? Nope, because that's not how Darwin's natural selection works! Lamarck believed organisms could pass on acquired traits (like if you lift weights, your kids would be born stronger). Darwin showed it's actually about genetic variations being selected over time. No amount of mask-wearing will give your kids built-in N95s!

Lamarckian Nose Jobs: When Genetics Takes A Selfie

Lamarckian Nose Jobs: When Genetics Takes A Selfie
The meme brilliantly skewers Lamarckian evolution—the hilariously outdated theory that acquired traits can be passed to offspring. Someone thinks a nose job will give their future kids small noses? Darwin is rolling in his grave! The "fact-checked by real Lysenkoist comrades" stamp adds a delicious layer of Soviet science history humor. Trofim Lysenko, Stalin's favorite "biologist," rejected Mendelian genetics and pushed Lamarckian ideas that set Soviet agriculture back decades. Nothing like some good old pseudoscience with a side of historical catastrophe to remind us why we love actual evidence-based biology!

Lamarck's Posthumous Victory Dance

Lamarck's Posthumous Victory Dance
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck is having the ultimate posthumous victory dance! The poor guy spent 200 years being the laughingstock of evolutionary biology for suggesting that acquired traits could be inherited. Then epigenetics shows up and proves he wasn't completely wrong after all! Turns out environmental factors can influence gene expression without changing DNA sequences. Somewhere in the afterlife, Lamarck is doing this exact dance while Darwin awkwardly sips his tea. Vindication takes time—about two centuries in this case—but who's counting?