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Annoying creationists

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It’s quite simple joobz. If a creature has to expend energy to survive a selection pressure, the creature has less energy available to reproduce.
Sure, but what does this have to do with natural selection and the first law? I've asked you for a clear explanation of how natural selection is a rephrasing of the 1st law, and you respond with an entirely unrelated point. The first law has nothing to do with energy optimization of the system. It has nothing to do with what will or will not be perferred. A carnot engine and a real engine both obey the first law, but 1 is optimized the other isnt/ The first law simply states the overall energy exchange balance. That's it. But, then again, you know this. Afterall, you have a PhD in engineering, right?
It seems your mind is so prejudiced and biased by the theory of evolution that you have lost the ability to understand simple logic.
Dr. Kleinman, Dr. Kleinman, Dr. Kleinman....:rub: We love you. We want you to get better. But you must first admit you have a problem. You're addicted to lies. We are here for you.
 

Oh, Dr Schneider has documented his mathematical equations extensively which describes mutation and natural selection in his web site and his peer reviewed publications as well as posting his Pascal version of the ev computer simulation on his web site. You have pointed us to the very helpful Wikipedia reference to the mathematics of the fitness landscape. I’ll point you back to the hundreds of cases run with ev that show that as genome length is increased and realistic mutation rates are use in the model, the number of generations needed to evolve the binding sites becomes too large to support the theory of evolution. And if you look at the behavior of ev when you set two of the three selection conditions to zero, it becomes obvious why mutation and selection becomes an impossible mechanism for macroevolution. Multiple selection conditions cause the rate of convergence of the model to become profoundly slow.

This type of mathematical behavior is seen in numerous applications. Whether it is in database sorting, optimization problems or your example of sorting your sock drawer, the more conditions which you sort on, optimize on or evolve on, the slower the process goes. There are no mathematical examples where this process speeds up as the system becomes more complex. This simple conclusion can be drawn on this complicated subject.

Ok, let’s see how close we can make the sock analogy to mutation and selection. Let’s assume you have no a priori knowledge of the number of colors socks. You start by randomly choosing two socks out of the drawer. If they match, roll them together, if not, start a pile of each color. Continue this process until you finish taking all the socks from the drawer. If the socks are all of one color, your task is finished. If your socks are multiple colored, you have to take the now sorted piles of socks and roll them together. It takes more time and work to match and roll multiple different colors of socks than to match and roll a collection of single color socks. Delphi has come up with very nice, simple example, of why multiple selection conditions slow evolution.

I’m not misusing your term “perfect creature”, I’m defining for readers of the thread exactly what this term means. This definition is perfectly consistent with Kjkent1’s point that a “perfect creature” arises instantaneously with no selection pressures at all. No selection pressure means there are no mistakes. I’m not shooting myself in the foot; I’m shooting your theory of evolution in the heart.

Why don’t you explain to us what the function of mutation and selection is?

You are missing a point to argue. What you may have is a situation where the two selection case puts the model on a point in the fitness landscape that gives few easy paths to an optimum while adding a third selection condition enables the model to find a path to an optimum. You should not be amazed that zero selection conditions leads to zero mistakes, you have stopped performing mutation and selection under this circumstance.

There are many other mathematical situations that exhibit similar behavior to what ev demonstrates. This effect of the “degraded” the behavior ev not only intuitively obvious but also is seen in many similar applications. Why don’t you give us an example of multiple selection conditions that evolve more quickly than a single selection condition? This is the extrapolation you are making.

Do you think semantics is not going to win this debate little gator? Why don’t you try some mathematics? Why don’t you try to tell us what the purpose of mutation and selection is?

You haven’t read this thread very carefully, if you had you would have seen that I called the theory of evolution “dumbass”.

If you apply the concept of the first law to natural selection, what you are saying is that the creature that can put more energy toward reproduction than other life activities will be the most successful creature by your theory of evolution. So how do you select for something that does not exist?

In one breath, you evolutionists complain that I’m always moving the goalposts and in your next breath you complain I haven’t changed my argument one bit. Would you evolutionists make up your mind?

Are you sure you mean “wonder” or did you mean to say “wander”? Wonder means to speculate.

Dr Schneider’s statements are not my conjectures. He is the author of this peer reviewed and published model of mutation and selection and he believes his model simulates reality. It appears he is going to be that last evolutionist to believe this.

So you think that when ev shows that its multiple selection conditions slows evolution profoundly is “trivial minituae” and that the use of combination therapy for the treatment of HIV to slow the evolution of resistant strains of the virus is “trivial minituae”. I will take this “trivial minituae” any time over your contorted interpretation of reality as you attempt to fit these observations to your ridiculous theory.

You are in denial Ichneumonwasp. This is what Dr Schneider designed ev to do:

This sentence is from the peer reviewed and published paper Ev Evolution of Biological Information written by Dr Schneider and was published in Nucleic Acids Research.

It is abundantly clear that Dr Schneider designed his model for more than the one thing you have suggested. When you investigate the other features of his model, it shows the theory of evolution to be mathematically impossible. The number of generations required to evolve binding sites with realistic genome lengths and mutation rates becomes huge, too huge to support the theory of evolution. The reason the number of generations becomes huge is that multiple selection conditions slow the evolutionary process. The model also shows that increasing population does not markedly accelerate the evolutionary process as evolutionists like to claim.

I like the way Dr Schneider argues this point:

With respects to my “hand-picked example”, there are numerous examples of the use of combination therapy to slow the evolution of resistant strains of microbes, HIV and TB happen to be the most obvious and there are numerous examples of the use of monotherapy and the evolution of multidrug resistant strains of microbes such as Gonorrhea, MRSA, pseudomonas being obvious examples. I suspect that a similar pattern would be seen with the use of herbicides and pesticides.

Again, let’s see what Dr Schneider intended for his model which was published in the peer reviewed journal, Nucleic Acids Research.

You are not going to win this debate by misinterpreting what Dr Schneider’s intentions are for his model. I happen to believe that Dr Schneider properly modeled mutation and selection. This is seen by the evolutionary consequences of the use of combination therapy for the treatment of infectious diseases.

Well, you can squirm around and try to find a way to reinterpret the many quotes of Dr Schneider but only an extremely prejudiced and biased reader will find your contorted interpretations acceptable.

However, the three selection pressure does slow evolution, that is what ev shows and that is what this example shows.

Lateral transfer of information can not and does not increase the information in the gene pool. Neither does recombination without error.

The fact is you alleged this was my model when you said the following:

This is Dr Schneider’s model and it very nicely explains why combination therapy is useful in slowing the evolution of resistant strains when treating HIV.

Every time you say this, I will post Dr Schneider’s statement that appeared in his peer reviewed publication about his model. Hopefully you will get the hint and either abandon your useless argument and acknowledge what his model shows or at least come up with a more sensible argument.


If you read this thread carefully, you will see that I told Paul that the reason the generations for convergence were increasing so rapidly with increasing genome length was the effect of increased spurious binding in the nonbinding site region of the genome. It was only when I became aware that you could set weight factors to zero that I could show that multiple selection conditions was what was slowing evolution in ev.

If you think that varying the potency of selection pressures will somehow overcome the effect that multiple selection pressures slow evolution, you need to show this.

Taffer seems to think that I haven’t changed my argument, you think I have. The only thing I have changed in my argument is to give an explanation why ev evolves so slowly with long genomes.

You are not the only evolutionist I am discussing these issues with. You sometime take quotes addressed to Paul, Mr Scott or others and assume I am addressing responses to you. Mr Scott raised the issue of super bug Gonorrhea; I have just incorporated it into the discussion. I am under no obligation to restrict my discussion with you to only what you want to talk about. If I did that, you have already attempted to reinterpret what Dr Schneider’s intent is for his model and there would be no discussion at all. You evolutionist just like to whine. You think you can frame a mathematical discussion this way but it doesn’t work.

Well, here we go again:

Not only has Dr Schneider invited this type of analysis with his model publicly through his peer reviewed and published paper on his model, he also personally invited me to do this type of analysis in direct email communication with me. Ichneumonwasp, stop whining that the result of this type of analysis shows your theory is mathematically impossible. It does show how mutation and selection works and this is useful for understanding how to address the evolution of drug resistance when treating infectious diseases.

There is no need for me to reiterate Dr Schneider’s derivations here. Read his publications and you can find the equations he used to derive his model. In addition, Dr Schneider modeled enough of the evolutionary landscape to describe the mathematics of mutation and selection. Again, Dr Schneider has well said:

Other mutation mechanisms will not change the mathematical fact that increasing the number of selection pressures slows the evolutionary process.

Why would an evolutionist want to scrap a peer reviewed and published model of random point mutation and natural selection?

You aren’t going to accusing me of misrepresenting what you have said, are you?

You have just focused the argument when you said that “the number of selection pressures in not the critical element”. Ev shows that the number of selection pressures is critical in slowing the evolutionary process. What are the critical parameters in the mutation and selection process of evolution? As it stands now, the mathematics of ev shows that genome length and the number of selection conditions are the dominant parameters in the mutation and selection process.

Mr Scott, the James Randi Educational Forum pussy cat, this is not what I have asserted. What I have asserted is that multiple selection conditions slow the evolutionary process and the use of combination therapy for the treatment of HIV nicely demonstrates this. In addition, this is not a demonstration of macroevolution. What gene has evolved from the beginning? What new function has evolved for these already existing genes?
So you didn't think up any new lies over the weekend?

We've already demolished this nonsense. See my FAQ for further details.

When you drool out these halfwitted lies, whom do you hope to fool?

We all know you're lying.
 
kjkent1 said:
I'm one of the only persons on this thread who has actually done any experiments using ev to back my position.
kleinman said:
Really? Paul did you read this? Myriad, did you read this? kjkent1 is the only one who has actually done experiments using ev to back his position.
So, what was the point of that except to prove to any latecomers to the thread that you're a halfwit and a liar?

We can all read what kjkent1 posted. We can all see that you're lying about what he posted. We all know that only a drooling moron tells lies when he is certain to be caught.

So why do you do it? Why do you repeatedly degrade and humiliate yourself in a public place?

Are you insane? Do you have a paraphiliac fetish for being proved wrong? Do you just loathe the truth so much that you'll take any opportunity to lie? Are you a fifth-columnist trying to make creationists look, not merely stupid, but morally loathsome? Do you just want to give us all a good laugh at the ridiculous spectacle of a creationist grovelling in his own filth? Other (please specify)?
 
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Mr Scott, the James Randi Educational Forum pussy cat, this is not what I have asserted.

I do not attempt to engage in rational debate with people I'm sure are emotionally disturbed, and that remark proves to me you are indeed disturbed.
 
Kleinman said:
Even if you don’t pair the socks, it takes more work to sort multiple color socks. If the socks are all the same color, as you randomly pull the socks out of the draw, the socks all go into one pile. If you have a variety of different color socks, you must decide which pile to put the sock into. That requires more decision making and makes the sort go more slowly.
Not if each sock is tagged with a molecule unique to each color. Then the socks simply move to the correct pile, with the amount of work constant regardless of the number of colors.

It's a busted-ass analogy.

I just wanted to make sure that you got credit for all your hard work. After all, if it wasn’t for Dr Schneider’s mathematics and your good computer programming skills, it would be much more difficult to prove your theory is mathematically impossible. I appreciate all you have done, now if we can only teach Dr Schneider’s mathematics to Ichneumonwasp, then we will have really accomplished something.
Thanks, but Kjkent never said he was the only one who did experiments.

~~ Paul
 
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Kleinman said:
It’s not a single equation.

Oh, goody, then we're making progress. Give them all to me, Dr. Kleinman. You say you have them. I don't believe you Dr. Kleinman. Pretend that I'm from Missouri, Dr. Kleinman. Show me the maths! You do have these equations, Dr. Kleinman? You needn't hide behind this constructed fantasy that I do not understand Dr. Kleinman. You may repeat to yourself that mantra as much as you wish, Dr. Alan Kleinman, but all I can see is that you are lying about having the mathematics behind evolution. If you do, produce it for all to see, Dr. Alan Kleinman. Or is this another of your many lies and misrepresentations?

So what is this position of yours that you continually whine that I am misrepresenting? It can’t be your position that multiple selection pressures slow the evolution process since that is true.

Gosh and Gee willikers Dr. Kleinman, you keep telling poor pitiful me that I am such a bear of little brain that I cannot comprehend that three selection pressures slow evolution even when I have repeatedly stated that three pressures added together (potency held constant) in fact do slow the process, for one definition of "evolution". You have done this numerous times Dr. Alan Kleinman even admitting that you misrepresented my position, and then you did it again.

What I want to know is why you continue to lie Dr. Alan Kleinman?
 
Kleinman said:
Just what mutation mechanism is going to speed up the process of evolution? And what is that selection condition that would evolve a gene from the beginning?

I'm sorry, which definition of "evolution" are you using here? Um, what mutation mechanism is going to speed up the process of increased variability? I'd say each and every one of them, Dr. Kleinman. Is this a trick question? You do know what varibility means, don't you?

What selection condition would evolve a gene from the beginning? The question is probably nonsensical, Dr. Klwinman, but first please tell me why you continue to dodge the issue we -- you and I -- are discussing -- your use of HIV triple therapy as your real world example for ev? Have you renounced your use of this example, since it shows that resistance develops and develops fairly quickly?

Oh no, I never said that you couldn’t evolve three selection conditions in realistic periods of time, what I said is that multiple selection conditions slow the evolutionary process. You wouldn’t misrepresent what I have said would you?

What? You said in the past that three selection conditions so profoundly slow the process of evolution that evolution is mathematically impossible. You continue to say that it is mathematically impossible. This, despite the fact that resistance can develop in a few short years despite the presence of three selection conditions. So, you have changed your initial stance?

You have argued that ev shows mathematically that three selection conditions result in such a huge number of generations that evolution is impossible. Yet, reality shows that resistance can develop quickly under three selection conditions, not requiring millions upon millions of generations. So which is correct in this situation, Dr. Kleinman, ev or reality?
 
Kleinman versus numeracy:

I have a little problem with this estimate of 128 mutations per genome per generation. If you take a mutation rate of 10^-7 and a genome length of 3x10^8, you should only get about 30 mutations per generation per genome. They suggest and overall mutation rate of 2.14x10^-8 which would give only about 7 mutations per generation per genome.
I believe my calculations are correct for a genome of length 3x10^8 however, a human genome is about 3x10^9 base pairs in length. So using their overall mutation rate of 2.14*10^-8 for a genome length of 3x10^9 would yield an average of about 70 mutations per genome per generation. This is still far short of the 128 mutations per genome per generation for the authors’ final estimate. Something is wrong with their bookkeeping.
I think you want to double that to account for diploidy.

Kleinman versus genetics:

Perhaps you would give us a reference for a self-replicating molecule in any living thing.

:dl:
 
Sorry, missed this too.

Kleinman said:
The rate of information gain becomes profoundly slow when you use realistic genome lengths and mutations rates. Why does this happen? It happens because multiple selection conditions slow down the rate of information gain.

Oh, so you are saying that information gain becomes so profoundly slow when three selection pressures are combined that evolution cannot realistically occur. You say this, despite the real-world example of resistance developing in short order under what you have called three selection pressures -- HIV triple therapy. Last time I checked HIV was virus with a realistic genome length. How is this possible, Dr. Kleinman?


Don’t worry, I’ll help you out with the stuff you miss (which is just about everything when it comes to the mathematics of mutation and selection).

How cute of you, Dr Kleinman! It gives me goosebumps every time you witness for Nietzsche and Freud in these nearly ceaseless attempts to insult me. A thing of beauty it is to watch you turn your back on Judeo-Christian ethics.

I only wish that you would post on the weekends since I do so treasure these moments watching you dig deeper that endless pit. Short of a Mack truck driving through my fifth floor window, I would never dream of ending this conversation as it provides too much pure entertainment value. Please post more often, and please continue to witness for Herr Nietzsche. He needs all the help he can get these days.
 
What? You said in the past that three selection conditions so profoundly slow the process of evolution that evolution is mathematically impossible. You continue to say that it is mathematically impossible. This, despite the fact that resistance can develop in a few short years despite the presence of three selection conditions. So, you have changed your initial stance?

Fat chance. What we're getting to is the rub.

Since the observed evolution is impossible by chance, there must have been Intervention to thwart the predictable efforts of Science - which is just the latest incarnation of the Tower of Babel.
 
Annoying Creationists

Kleinman said:
It’s quite simple joobz. If a creature has to expend energy to survive a selection pressure, the creature has less energy available to reproduce.
joobz said:
Sure, but what does this have to do with natural selection and the first law? I've asked you for a clear explanation of how natural selection is a rephrasing of the 1st law, and you respond with an entirely unrelated point. The first law has nothing to do with energy optimization of the system. It has nothing to do with what will or will not be perferred. A carnot engine and a real engine both obey the first law, but 1 is optimized the other isnt/ The first law simply states the overall energy exchange balance. That's it. But, then again, you know this. Afterall, you have a PhD in engineering, right?
I find it embarrassing that someone who calls himself an engineer can not comprehend that reproduction requires energy. Fitness is measured by the ability to reproduce and since reproduction requires energy and selection pressures divert energy from reproduction, therefore, natural selection is a restatement of conservation of energy. That’s another way of saying the 1st law of thermodynamics for you alchemical engineers.
Kleinman said:
Mr Scott, the James Randi Educational Forum pussy cat, this is not what I have asserted.
Mr Scott said:
I do not attempt to engage in rational debate with people I'm sure are emotionally disturbed, and that remark proves to me you are indeed disturbed.
Oh really, so you are not the James Randi Education pussy cat? I thought you were claiming that role when you said:
Mr Scott said:
…I don't find Dr. Kleinman annoying. I find him amusing, as a cat finds a mouse amusing. I play until he bores me, then come back later to play again when I think of another way swat at him so I can watch him jump.
The only place I am jumping is on the theory of evolution. It has been shown with your own mathematics of mutation and selection that your theory is impossible. Why is it impossible? It is impossible because multiple selection pressure profoundly slow the evolutionary process. We have your mathematics to show this and we have numerous real cases that show this. Anyway, what is more rational than mathematics? You know, 2+2=4, mutation + selection ¹ the theory of evolution.
Kleinman said:
Even if you don’t pair the socks, it takes more work to sort multiple color socks. If the socks are all the same color, as you randomly pull the socks out of the draw, the socks all go into one pile. If you have a variety of different color socks, you must decide which pile to put the sock into. That requires more decision making and makes the sort go more slowly.
Paul said:
Not if each sock is tagged with a molecule unique to each color. Then the socks simply move to the correct pile, with the amount of work constant regardless of the number of colors.
What if you wash your socks with detergent with added ribozymes? Not does the theory of evolution go down the drain, so does the RNA world hypothesis.
Paul said:
It's a busted-ass analogy.
Oh, that’s right, we know that socks exist; they must have sorted when they were hung out on the clothes line. You know that sunlight has the capability of sorting socks.
Kleinman said:
I just wanted to make sure that you got credit for all your hard work. After all, if it wasn’t for Dr Schneider’s mathematics and your good computer programming skills, it would be much more difficult to prove your theory is mathematically impossible. I appreciate all you have done, now if we can only teach Dr Schneider’s mathematics to Ichneumonwasp, then we will have really accomplished something.
Paul said:
Thanks, but Kjkent never said he was the only one who did experiments.
So perhaps Kjkent1 can teach Ichneumonwasp the mathematics of mutation and selection. He can do it after a hearty meal of red herring, string cheese and whine.
Kleinman said:
The rate of information gain becomes profoundly slow when you use realistic genome lengths and mutations rates. Why does this happen? It happens because multiple selection conditions slow down the rate of information gain.
Ichneumonwasp said:
Oh, so you are saying that information gain becomes so profoundly slow when three selection pressures are combined that evolution cannot realistically occur. You say this, despite the real-world example of resistance developing in short order under what you have called three selection pressures -- HIV triple therapy. Last time I checked HIV was virus with a realistic genome length. How is this possible, Dr. Kleinman?
Let’s see, Dr Richard said that you have about 10^9 HIV viruses produced per day. How quickly do those three selection conditions get satisfied? Do you want to try that mathematics on a free living organism, something that has a genome length of 500k, not 17 or 18k like HIV? Ev evolved 3 selection conditions fairly rapidly on an 18k genome, what do think happens on a 500k genome? Since you are have little idea of the mathematics of mutation and selection, the rate of information gain goes down profoundly as you increase genome length. If you had read this thread, you would have seen the data posted from the peer reviewed and published computer simulation of mutation and selection.

Kjkent1 is an expert on the mathematics of mutation and selection. He has run cases with ev. He will explain this mathematics to you.
Kleinman said:
Don’t worry, I’ll help you out with the stuff you miss (which is just about everything when it comes to the mathematics of mutation and selection).
Ichneumonwasp said:
How cute of you, Dr Kleinman! It gives me goosebumps every time you witness for Nietzsche and Freud in these nearly ceaseless attempts to insult me. A thing of beauty it is to watch you turn your back on Judeo-Christian ethics.
Are you an expert on Judeo-Christian ethics? Could you explain to us Genesis 1:1?
 
I find it embarrassing that someone who calls himself an engineer can not comprehend that reproduction requires energy.

Yes reproduction requires energy.. So far you are correct...
[quote=kleinman;2548381]Fitness is measured by the ability to reproduce and since reproduction requires energy and selection pressures divert energy from reproduction, [/quote]
not bad you are still correct...
therefore, natural selection is a restatement of conservation of energy.
Ohh, a swing and a miss....
yes, natural selection and all particpants in the process must obey the 1st and second law, but natural selection is a something else. Conservation of energy just means that energy can change forms but can't be created. there's nothing there about most efficient reproductive use of energy. if no energy changes form, that would still be in agreement wth the first law.

[/quote]That’s another way of saying the 1st law of thermodynamics for you alchemical engineers.[/quote]
Nope, see above. but I thank you. I've used all of your crazy statements several times now as in class examples of poor thermodynamics. I'm hoping you continue your arguments here because I'd like to have a few more examples of poor logic and scientific reasoning.
 
Kleinman said:
Let’s see, Dr Richard said that you have about 10^9 HIV viruses produced per day. How quickly do those three selection conditions get satisfied? Do you want to try that mathematics on a free living organism, something that has a genome length of 500k, not 17 or 18k like HIV? Ev evolved 3 selection conditions fairly rapidly on an 18k genome, what do think happens on a 500k genome? Since you are have little idea of the mathematics of mutation and selection, the rate of information gain goes down profoundly as you increase genome length. If you had read this thread, you would have seen the data posted from the peer reviewed and published computer simulation of mutation and selection.

Gosh, no, Dr. kleinman. Perhaps if you supplied me with the actual equations since you say you have the mathematics of evolution, then I could work it out quite nicely. As it is, since you have refused to give me these equations I will have to make do with the paltry evidence of reality which tells me that HIV under three selection conditions (by your recokoning) performs what you have previously called the impossible task of evolving triple resistant strains fairly quickly. So, you do the math, Dr. Kleinman, and tell me how this is possible under your theory and this apparently phantom mathematics that you continually promote.

Are you an expert on Judeo-Christian ethics?

Nope, Dr, Kleinman, never claimed to be. It now takes an expert to be able to recognize when someone foregoes politeness and doesn't follow cultural ethical norms? That's news to me. You may continue the insults, though. I love them. Let them fall like rain over my poor miserable self while they pool between my toes. Squishy. They so lay bare who and what you are.
 
kleinman said:
So perhaps Kjkent1 can teach Ichneumonwasp the mathematics of mutation and selection. He can do it after a hearty meal of red herring, string cheese and whine.
Why sure, Alan! I'd be happy to explain it.

The raw odds of the evolution by random mutation and natural selection of particular genetic sequence of a length equivalent to any known free living life form is astronomically small. However, this calculus, upon which Dr. Kleinman depends to support his theistic raving, is premised on a foundation of the logical fallacy that certain particular evolutionary outcomes are required in advance.

This premise is an easily predicted result when considering that the personality who requires it believes in an utterly deterministic universe. Kleinman "knows" that God created the Heavens and the Earth in six days, and therefore everything which follows was preordained. So, the probability calculations which render evolution mathematically impossible, must be the proof of the existence of God, because, as just mentioned, Kleinman already "knows" that God "is."

However, if the premise is reversed, and we presume that God does not exist, and that we live in a universe which is entirely the product of random ignorant chance, then the only thing required of random mutation and natural selection is change, because no particular evolutionary result is required.

If life is a process of matter which occurs under suitable conditions and evolves while those conditions persist, then given matter, life will occur and it will evolve, the odds of its existence is unity, and the proof is that we are here to consider the issue.

In the end, the choice is a belief that (1) the universe is created by a purposeful will and then devolves from maximum complexity to total entropy -- cut short by a judgment day, or (2) that the universe appears out of uncertainty, develops locales where turbulence permits complexity to evolve, and continues to do so into the uncertain future.

The former belief is repulsive to me, because it means that we are all the slaves of an entity who toys with us throughout our existence. Whereas the latter believe allows me at least the illusion of being able to fumble through my own existence on my own.

I prefer to be a leaf blowing on the wind, than a lab rat in a cage. Kleinman evidence prefers to be the rat.

To each his/her own.
 
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I find it embarrassing that someone who calls himself an engineer can not comprehend that reproduction requires energy. Fitness is measured by the ability to reproduce and since reproduction requires energy and selection pressures divert energy from reproduction, therefore, natural selection is a restatement of conservation of energy. That’s another way of saying the 1st law of thermodynamics for you alchemical engineers.

Oh really, so you are not the James Randi Education pussy cat? I thought you were claiming that role when you said:

The only place I am jumping is on the theory of evolution. It has been shown with your own mathematics of mutation and selection that your theory is impossible. Why is it impossible? It is impossible because multiple selection pressure profoundly slow the evolutionary process. We have your mathematics to show this and we have numerous real cases that show this. Anyway, what is more rational than mathematics? You know, 2+2=4, mutation + selection ¹ the theory of evolution.

What if you wash your socks with detergent with added ribozymes? Not does the theory of evolution go down the drain, so does the RNA world hypothesis.

Oh, that’s right, we know that socks exist; they must have sorted when they were hung out on the clothes line. You know that sunlight has the capability of sorting socks.

So perhaps Kjkent1 can teach Ichneumonwasp the mathematics of mutation and selection. He can do it after a hearty meal of red herring, string cheese and whine.

Let’s see, Dr Richard said that you have about 10^9 HIV viruses produced per day. How quickly do those three selection conditions get satisfied? Do you want to try that mathematics on a free living organism, something that has a genome length of 500k, not 17 or 18k like HIV? Ev evolved 3 selection conditions fairly rapidly on an 18k genome, what do think happens on a 500k genome? Since you are have little idea of the mathematics of mutation and selection, the rate of information gain goes down profoundly as you increase genome length. If you had read this thread, you would have seen the data posted from the peer reviewed and published computer simulation of mutation and selection.

Kjkent1 is an expert on the mathematics of mutation and selection. He has run cases with ev. He will explain this mathematics to you.

Are you an expert on Judeo-Christian ethics? Could you explain to us Genesis 1:1?
So ... no new lies?

Never mind, I'm still amused by your bloated pretence of mathematical expertise.

Though I still live in hope that one day you will try to pretend that Lie #5 is true.

As for the totally insane stuff, I'd like to know: is that really all you can do? Scream nonsense about cheese and socks and fish when faced with the facts?

Really?
 
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Annoying Creationists

Kleinman said:
therefore, natural selection is a restatement of conservation of energy.
joobz said:
Ohh, a swing and a miss....
yes, natural selection and all particpants in the process must obey the 1st and second law, but natural selection is a something else. Conservation of energy just means that energy can change forms but can't be created. there's nothing there about most efficient reproductive use of energy. if no energy changes form, that would still be in agreement wth the first law.
So, you don’t think natural selection has anything to do with the efficient use of energy for reproduction? Then what is natural selection all about?
Kleinman said:
Let’s see, Dr Richard said that you have about 10^9 HIV viruses produced per day. How quickly do those three selection conditions get satisfied? Do you want to try that mathematics on a free living organism, something that has a genome length of 500k, not 17 or 18k like HIV? Ev evolved 3 selection conditions fairly rapidly on an 18k genome, what do think happens on a 500k genome? Since you are have little idea of the mathematics of mutation and selection, the rate of information gain goes down profoundly as you increase genome length. If you had read this thread, you would have seen the data posted from the peer reviewed and published computer simulation of mutation and selection.
Ichneumonwasp said:
Gosh, no, Dr. kleinman. Perhaps if you supplied me with the actual equations since you say you have the mathematics of evolution, then I could work it out quite nicely. As it is, since you have refused to give me these equations I will have to make do with the paltry evidence of reality which tells me that HIV under three selection conditions (by your recokoning) performs what you have previously called the impossible task of evolving triple resistant strains fairly quickly. So, you do the math, Dr. Kleinman, and tell me how this is possible under your theory and this apparently phantom mathematics that you continually promote.
You have read the references to Dr Schneider’s mathematics of mutation and selection but you have yet to understand them. If you run some simple cases (increase genome length and keep all other parameters constant) with ev, you will find that it is very easy to satisfy the three selection conditions on very short genomes. As you lengthen the genome; the generations for convergence increases at a supralinear rate. HIV has a genome length short enough (~18k) that this length genome will converge the three selection conditions in a reasonable length of time (reasonable number of generations). As you increase the genome length in ev, the generations for convergence becomes huge; try the model yourself. If you reduce the number of selection conditions to one, ev shows that this single selection condition will evolve much more rapidly than trying to evolve all three selection conditions simultaneously. This is exactly what is revealed in the real situation when combination therapy is used to treat HIV vs monotherapy treatment of this disease. This phenomenon is also demonstrated with pesticides, herbicides and rodenticides; combination use of these selection pressures delays the evolution of resistance to these selection pressures. This is the results you get from a peer reviewed and published mathematical model of mutation and natural selection and we have numerous real examples of this behavior. You have no mathematics to support your theory of evolution by mutation and selection and you have no examples that show multiple selection pressures accelerates evolution. In addition, you have no selection pressure that can evolve a gene from the beginning.
Kleinman said:
Are you an expert on Judeo-Christian ethics?
Ichneumonwasp said:
Nope, Dr, Kleinman, never claimed to be. It now takes an expert to be able to recognize when someone foregoes politeness and doesn't follow cultural ethical norms? That's news to me. You may continue the insults, though. I love them. Let them fall like rain over my poor miserable self while they pool between my toes. Squishy. They so lay bare who and what you are.
Well, you are not an expert on the mathematics of mutation and selection either. If you continue to study Dr Schneider’s mathematics and read the threads on this topic you will begin to understand why your theory is mathematically impossible. Multiple selection pressures slow evolution and you don’t have selection pressures that evolve genes from the beginning.
Kleinman said:
So perhaps Kjkent1 can teach Ichneumonwasp the mathematics of mutation and selection. He can do it after a hearty meal of red herring, string cheese and whine.
kjkent1 said:
Why sure, Alan! I'd be happy to explain it.
There you go Ichneumonwasp, prepare yourself for a hearty meal of red herring, string cheese and whine.
kjkent1 said:
The raw odds of the evolution by random mutation and natural selection of particular genetic sequence of a length equivalent to any known free living life form is astronomically small. However, this calculus, upon which Dr. Kleinman depends to support his theistic raving, is premised on a foundation of the logical fallacy that certain particular evolutionary outcomes are required in advance.
We start the meal with a big glass of whine. I doubt that Dr Schneider would call his mathematics “theistic”.
kjkent1 said:
This premise is an easily predicted result when considering that the personality who requires it believes in an utterly deterministic universe. Kleinman "knows" that God created the Heavens and the Earth in six days, and therefore everything which follows was preordained. So, the probability calculations which render evolution mathematically impossible, must be the proof of the existence of God, because, as just mentioned, Kleinman already "knows" that God "is."
Next, you get a big serving of red herring.
kjkent1 said:
However, if the premise is reversed, and we presume that God does not exist, and that we live in a universe which is entirely the product of random ignorant chance, then the only thing required of random mutation and natural selection is change, because no particular evolutionary result is required.
And now we get some string cheese; which of the 10^500 alternative universes are we talking about?
kjkent1 said:
If life is a process of matter which occurs under suitable conditions and evolves while those conditions persist, then given matter, life will occur and it will evolve, the odds of its existence is unity, and the proof is that we are here to consider the issue.
Ichneumonwasp, would you care for another serving of string cheese?
kjkent1 said:
In the end, the choice is a belief that (1) the universe is created by a purposeful will and then devolves from maximum complexity to total entropy -- cut short by a judgment day, or (2) that the universe appears out of uncertainty, develops locales where turbulence permits complexity to evolve, and continues to do so into the uncertain future.
And don’t let any mathematical science get in the way of your evolutionary belief system.
kjkent1 said:
The former belief is repulsive to me, because it means that we are all the slaves of an entity who toys with us throughout our existence. Whereas the latter believe allows me at least the illusion of being able to fumble through my own existence on my own.
You almost got the former correct. The former belief is that we are owned by our creator but not to toy with us throughout or existence.
kjkent1 said:
I prefer to be a leaf blowing on the wind, than a lab rat in a cage. Kleinman evidence prefers to be the rat.

To each his/her own.
And we finish this meal with another glass of whine. Kjkent1, don’t you realize that the leaf is slave to the wind?
 
So, you don’t think natural selection has anything to do with the efficient use of energy for reproduction? Then what is natural selection all about?
wow, you really don't understand science.

Of course natural selection has all to do with efficient energy use. What I'm saying is that the first law has nothing to do with energy efficiency. The first law doesn't care how efficient a process is. It only says that you can't make energy out of nothing. You can only switch between forms of energy. What that energy is used for or what it does doesn't matter.
 
We start the meal with a big glass of whine. I doubt that Dr Schneider would call his mathematics “theistic”.
Dr. Schneider admits that ev does not model all of the real-world means by which evolutionary change occurs. That is how he answered your conclusion that ev is too slow.

You refuse to accept this argument without further proof, however, you won't do any experiments to prove it. That's not Schneider's problem -- it's your problem.

You almost got the former correct. The former belief is that we are owned by our creator but not to toy with us throughout or existence.
You're deluded if you read the Christian Bible as anything other than an example of a diety who toys with his creations.


Why don't you explain to us how God punishes all women throughout history for Eve's original sin, by making their physique such that they are forced to suffer excrutiating pain during childbirth? That's not just toying -- it's sadistic torture!

Quite a God you've invented, Alan...quite a God.

Kjkent1, don’t you realize that the leaf is slave to the wind?
Slavery is the causing of one person to labor on behalf of another by means of actual or threatened physical force or legal coercion (U.S. v. Kozminiski).

The leaf doesn't labor on behalf of the wind. The rat is forced to undergo experiments by the researcher. And, God forces Man to labor on His behalf at the threat of eternal damnation.
 
Kleinman said:
You have read the references to Dr Schneider’s mathematics of mutation and selection but you have yet to understand them. If you run some simple cases (increase genome length and keep all other parameters constant) with ev, you will find that it is very easy to satisfy the three selection conditions on very short genomes. As you lengthen the genome; the generations for convergence increases at a supralinear rate. HIV has a genome length short enough (~18k) that this length genome will converge the three selection conditions in a reasonable length of time (reasonable number of generations). As you increase the genome length in ev, the generations for convergence becomes huge; try the model yourself. If you reduce the number of selection conditions to one, ev shows that this single selection condition will evolve much more rapidly than trying to evolve all three selection conditions simultaneously. This is exactly what is revealed in the real situation when combination therapy is used to treat HIV vs monotherapy treatment of this disease. This phenomenon is also demonstrated with pesticides, herbicides and rodenticides; combination use of these selection pressures delays the evolution of resistance to these selection pressures. This is the results you get from a peer reviewed and published mathematical model of mutation and natural selection and we have numerous real examples of this behavior. You have no mathematics to support your theory of evolution by mutation and selection and you have no examples that show multiple selection pressures accelerates evolution. In addition, you have no selection pressure that can evolve a gene from the beginning.

So, when Kjkent1 ran his simulations using genome lengths of 256 to roughly 4K with 3 selection pressures and arrived at generation estimates ranging from 13,000 to 600K to 700K, you will accept that as realistic? And you say that as genome size increases there is a non-linear effect on generation time such that generation times for convergence markedly increase? And you say that HIV with a genome length of 18K (roughly 4.5 times greater than the biggest genome that Kent ran) should be expected to converge in a realistic time frame? Since the generation time for HIV-1 is either 1.2 or 2 days, depending on what source you use, and the generation time for convergence increases in a non-linear fashion according to your account when 3 pressures are applied, how is it that a genome sized roughly 18K in the real world achieves resistance to three drugs within the lifetime of a human being and within a few years (approximatelyly 600-700 generations)? Your mathematics should invalidate that finding, Dr. Kleinman, but reality begs to differ. In other words, aside from the fact that you have now conceded that resistance can occur in HIV and HIV triple therapy is not a good real world model for your "mathematical impossibility" for evolution, reality shows that the mathematics of evolution that you are proposing is simply wrong.

Either throw out the model, throw out the surrogate measure of converging Rsequence --> Rfrequency, or admit that you have wasted all our time.

Evolution occurs at speeds orders of magnitude greater you say it should be occurring.
 
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