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Hi Fortifiv2! Welcome to PF!
Fortifiv2 said:
… Humans had to have started out sometime in the past, right? How did they reproduce without having defects. We know that population increases (in our world today) so it had to have had a beginning. How did the earliest people reproduce with each other if there wasn't a lot of them to choose from like today?
If a closely related male and female ("the first generation") were stranded alone today on an island, with no contact with anyone else for a thousand years, and if they bred, then the second generation would be likely to have a high proportion of defects.
If the second generation bred randomly, then the third generation would have an equally high proportion of defects (or is it higher?

).
But (survival of the fittest), the less fit will probably have fewer children,
and the more fit will be more likely to breed with each other than with the less fit. So the proportion of defects would be less.
In each succeeding generation, for the same reasons, the population would separate out, with the more defective either dying out or living, and interbreeding, in their own communities. And the more fit would look at them, and would avoid breeding with close relatives.
After a thousand years, most of the population would be free of the original defects (though of course,
new mutations would still be expected), with only small backward groups marrying close relatives.
By comparison, when "the first humans" arrived, they
were a defect, but a "good defect"!
Breeding with close relatives is an advantage for any defect, and is therefore an advantage for the species if it's a "good defect"!
At some stage, the advantage of preserving the "good defect" by inbreeding would be countered by an increasing proportion of "bad defects", and a tendency not to inbreed would have become "fittest for survival."
